Alamosa Police Officer Mollee Heeney stood with her brothers and sisters in arms, the community, and her mom as District Attorney Anne Kelly looked at her and told her how proud she was of Heeney. On Wednesday evening, the community joined at the firehouse, remembered fallen officers, and shared a meal and thanks with those who still wear the badge. 

The San Luis Valley has held this memorial for the past 18 years. May 15 is known as National Peace Officers Memorial Day. President John F. Kennedy declared National Peace Officers Memorial week in 1962. 

โ€œI hope that you never forget how important your job is and how amazing you are as individuals who put on the uniform every day to protect us,โ€ Kelly said. 

Law enforcement from every corner of the Valley gathered to hold a ceremony that is both somber and joyful. 

This time it was different. Earlier in the day, just a few hours before the gathering, a jury of 12 found Daniel Brandt Jr. guilty of attempted first degree murder of both Heeney and Ricardo Rangel. Heeney responded to a call of a fight in the 1200 Block of Denver Avenue in October 2022. When she arrived, she saw Rangel being fired upon by a juvenile, who was tried as an adult. Then she, too, was fired upon. Heeney and Rangel left that neighborhood alive that day, but forever changed. 

The last time a police officer was killed in the line of duty in the San Luis Valley was in 1973. Since then, however, police officers have passed from old age or suicide and their loss weighs heavy on the shoulders of many of the Valleyโ€™s cops. 

Alamosa County Sheriff Robert Jackson has been a police officer in the San Luis Valley for four decades and knew personally many of the names he read off during the evening. 

The ceremony is not only held for the police officers, but their family and friends, too. Alamosa Mayor Ty Coleman, whose mother was a narcotics officer in Houston, told the group โ€œIโ€™m sure that today thereโ€™s several of you here who are family members to our law enforcement officers who feel some of the same type of anxiety that I felt as a kid. Now, being a cop kid โ€ฆ it had its benefits, too.โ€ 

Coleman told the story of how he was standing at a bus stop and a group of school bullies came โ€œto beat me up.โ€ But one of them saw who he was and told the others, โ€œโ€˜Hey, we better leave that kid alone cause his momโ€™s a cop,โ€™ and whoosh, they disappeared. My momโ€™s shield protected me, even though she wasnโ€™t there.โ€ 

Sheriff Jackson took a few minutes and read a long list of names of the Valleyโ€™s fallen officers. โ€œWe have not talked about all the police officers who have affected us who didnโ€™t die in the line of duty. But they probably affected most of us in some way. It goes way back. Thankfully, some of them just died of old age. Some of them committed suicide. I thought it would be cool that we brought those names up so they stay in our memory.โ€


Alamosa Police Department

Chief Nyle Langston

City Marshal Charles Emerson

City Marshal Joseph R. Simons

Sgt. James Garland Parker

Ofc. Solomon Sam Romero

Ofc. Andrew Lopez

Ofc. Mike Valesquez

Ofc. John Peasley

Alamosa County Sheriffโ€™s Office

Sheriff James P. Drury

Dep. Dusty Claunch

Dep. William โ€œBillโ€ Lucero

Dep. Ben Phillips

Dep. Ron Goodman

Adams State Police Department

Ofc. Bob Lujan

Ofc. Lee Rourke

Ofc. Alycia Riggs

Center Police Department

Ofc. Oliver P. Cain

Ofc. Steve Martinez

Ofc. Don Wells

Conejos County Sheriffโ€™s Office

Sheriff Howard Galvez

Dep. Raymundo Martinez

Dep. Eduardo Dominguez

Dep. Robert Gurules

Costilla County Sheriffโ€™s Office

Sheriff Jose Adolfo Rodriguez

Sheriff Amos medina

Sheriff Gilberto Martinez

Dep. Rodulfo Roberto Sanchez

Dep. Angelo lobato

Del Norte Police Department

Chief Barney Black

Manassa Police Department

Ofc. Dale Ruff

Monte Vista Police Department

Assistant Chief Guy Everett Oโ€™neil

Night Marshal Clyde Lewis McDonald

Mineral County Sheriffโ€™s Office

Dep. Phil Leggitt

Rio Grande County Sheriffโ€™s Office

Undersheriff Zack Allen

Saguache County Sheriffโ€™s Office

Dep. James McClosky

Immigration and Customs Enforcement

Federal Agent David Mize

Colorado Department of Corrections Parole

Rick Black