Court
News Ohio
9/11
Hero Speaks to Ohio’s Law
Enforcement Officers
By Jenna Gant
October 26, 2012
Jason
Thomas, a former marine who
was instrumental in the heroic rescue of two New York Port Authority
Officers
on September 11, 2001, gave the opening remarks at the 2012 Law
Enforcement
Conference in Columbus on October 25.
The
two-day conference gathered
Ohio’s state, county, and municipal law enforcement officers to talk
about an
array of subjects challenging today’s officers. It featured 30
educational
workshops on topics including officer-involved shooting investigations,
child
sex trafficking, survival mindset training, and the Chardon school
shooting.
Around 1,000 law enforcement officers attended the conference.
Thomas,
who’s currently a court
security officer at the Ohio Supreme Court, lived in New York when
terrorists
crashed two planes into the World Trade Center.
He’s now a motivational speaker and
talked to Ohio’s law enforcement
officers about persevering and never leaving a brother behind.
“I
took it personally, and I knew
it was a terrorist attack. I also knew there was going to be a lot of
men and
women who lost their life on that day or was going to need assistance,
and I
just wanted to be in a position to assist,” Thomas said.
Thomas
said he wanted the officers
who attended the conference to reflect on the good that came out of
9/11 and to
also remember the tragedy that all experienced on that day.
“Every
year we tend to pull a
little further away from what took place on 9/11. We’re starting to
forget a
little bit about how the terrorist attack affected this country and all
the men
and women that were there that day,” Thomas said.
Thomas
told the officers that it
takes a special person to want to get into law enforcement, and he
commended
them on all of their efforts.
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