‘It’s a Different World’ for Law Enforcement Officers After Killings

An ugly byproduct of the recent turmoil has been a newfound willingness to do harm to those in uniform, many police officers say

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By Joel Rubin, Molly Hennessy-Fiske and Richard Winton

Los Angeles Times

HOUSTON — During his 21 years in law enforcement, Cpl. Wayne Curry hasn’t worried much about the approach of strangers.

The Texas officer, like anyone who wears a badge, said he has had his share of run-ins with those who harbor a dislike of the police. But when people have stepped up to him, he said, it is “more likely they want to buy me dinner.”

Curry is now thinking twice. He spoke as he watched over a crowd of about 1,500 people gathered at an impromptu memorial at a gas station in a Houston suburb, where an on-duty officer from a neighboring department in Harris County near Houston was gunned down Friday in an apparently unprovoked attack while fueling his car.

“This was an ambush, a coward that took advantage,” Curry said.

The killing was the latest in a spate of deadly attacks in which police officers have been the targets. Last week, two Louisiana officers were killed in separate incidents and two officers in Mississippi died in May when they came under fire during a traffic stop. At least 25 police killings in New York; Pennsylvania; San Jose, Calif., and elsewhere have rattled police already this year.

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