Trending Topics

‘Our hearts are heavy': Wife of Dodgers player recounts fallen Calif. officer’s kind gesture

After the Freeman family shared that their son was battling a medical condition, Lake Baldwin Officer Samuel Riveros followed up on his condition and gave them a police patch

Affiliate Article 1 thumbnail - JP - 2025-06-04T162959.203.png

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Freddie Freeman is interviewed following a baseball game against the New York Mets, Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Left, AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea) Lake Baldwin Officer Samuel Riveros Was killed in a shooting on May 31. (Right, Officer Down Memorial Page)

Associated Press, Officer Down Memorial Page

By Steve Henson
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Tears flowed from Freddie Freeman as he sat in a Dodger Stadium interview room Aug. 5 and described the arduous recovery his 3-year-old son Max was making from a rare neurological condition in which the body’s immune system attacks the nerves.

Max had returned home from a five-night stay at Children’s Hospital Orange County, and Freeman was back in the Dodgers lineup after missing eight games to be with his family during the ordeal.

Two months later, the Dodgers were playing host to the New York Mets in the National League Championship Series . A police officer approached Freeman’s wife, Chelsea, to ask how Max was doing.

The officer, Samuel Riveros of the Baldwin Park Police Department, smiled and handed her a police patch to give to Max.

Riveros was killed Saturday in Baldwin Park when a gunman fatally shot him in the head while Riveros was rushing to the aid of a fellow officer who also had been shot, a law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation told The Times.

Chelsea Freeman related meeting Riveros on her Instagram Stories and offered her family’s condolences.

“Our hearts are heavy hearing of his passing this week,” she posted. “We met during the Dodgers /Mets playoffs. He came up to me, asked how my son Max was doing and handed me his police patch to give to him.

“A small gesture that meant so much.”

Freddie Freeman was a World Series hero for the Dodgers in 2024, hitting a walk-off grand slam to win Game 1 against the New York Yankees. He is off to a hot start in 2025, currently leading the NL with a .368 batting average.

Riveros had been a Baldwin Park officer since 2016, joined the agency’s SWAT team in 2019, and had recently become a field training officer, which in a statement the agency called a “testament to his leadership and mentorship.”

Riveros was known for his devotion to the Dodgers , even traveling to the stadiums of opposing teams to watch them play, according to Baldwin Park Police Chief Robert A . López.

“Officer Riveros gave his life in service to others, a profound testament to his unwavering dedication to duty and selfless courage,” the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department wrote in a statement. “His loss is profoundly felt — not only by his family and colleagues, but by the entire Baldwin Park community and law enforcement family.”

Eduardo Roberto Medina-Berumen , 22, was arrested on suspicion of murder and is being held in lieu of $4 million bail, according to the Sheriff’s Department . He lives with his mother at the Baldwin Park home on Filhurst Avenue where gunfire erupted Saturday night, a source said.

“This tragic shooting is a sobering reminder of the danger our first responders face when they answer the call,” Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman said in a statement.

Trending
During the White House event, the FOP praised President Donald Trump for addressing income tax on overtime pay and strengthening immigration enforcement
President Trump invoked Title 10 authority to place the California National Guard under federal control, bypassing Gov. Gavin Newsom amid protests over immigration enforcement
Grant Hardin, dubbed the “Devil in the Ozarks,” was found just 1.5 miles from the Calico Rock prison he walked out of by impersonating a corrections officer
House File 856 prohibits public entities from offering what it defines as “preferential treatment or special benefits” based on identity categories

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times .
©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.