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Capture the moment

Small, easy-to-operate digital cameras are now readily available and not terribly expensive. Get one to keep in your patrol bag or even your back pocket when you’re on duty. A quick digital shot or two can help you reconstruct an accident or a crime scene later, and its great to document injuries, gang activity (such as tattoos or graffiti), the room conditions after a domestic brawl; the possibilities are endless!

Even though many of us have the luxury of calling in Forensics to take pictures, it doesn’t hurt to have your own digital documentation. Besides, digital cameras also come in handy to document a commendation in roll call, a great drug seizure, or one of those many funny moments we encounter as cops and say to ourselves: “I wish I had a camera with me!”

Who knows, you may end up as a contributor to the Police One’s “Picture of the Week!”

My column is undergoing a bit of an identity crisis. I’ve been writing for the Street Survival “Newsline” and the P1 Newsletter for several years. As a Street Survival seminar instructor, I write about officer safety and survival, but I’m also a supervisor, a mom, a trainer, a cop’s wife, and dare I say, a woman, so I’ve got a lot to say about any number of topics (what woman doesn’t?!), and I’ve always received great feedback from our readers. So when Police One approached me and asked me to author a monthly column dealing with women’s issues, I enthusiastically agreed. “What a great opportunity” I naively thought “to bring issues to light that both women and men in law enforcement could all relate to, perhaps discuss at roll call, and ultimately learn something from each other.” Yeah, just call me Sergeant Pollyanna…I forgot that by calling it a “women’s” column, not only will most of our male readers skip over it, but so will at least half our female readers. What?! Why in the world wouldn’t women read a “women’s” column?! Because, there are a lot of female crimefighters out there like me who have spent a lot of years just trying to blend in, to be “one of the guys” if you will…to be perceived as and conduct ourselves as “warriors,” not “victims.” We don’t want special treatment; we just want to be cops.