Family, Friends & Fellow Officers Remember...

Captain Roy Huskey

Rutherford County Sheriff's Office, North Carolina

End of Watch Thursday, May 31, 1979

Leave a Reflection

Reflections for Captain Roy Huskey

Thank you for your service and please know that your memory and sacrifice are always remembered by your law enforcement brethren. Rest in peace always.

Detective Cpl/3 Steven Rizzo
Delaware State Police (Retired)

May 31, 2021

Rest in peace Captain Huskey.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

December 11, 2020

I remeber this horrible day very well. I was 13 . A dark day for all in the country. Roy was a hero.

PR
Family acquaintance.

July 28, 2019

Capt. Huskey,
On today, the 40th anniversary of your death I would just like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice for the citizens of Rutherford County. And to your Family and loved ones, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.

BPA Mike Casey
United States Border Patrol
El Paso Station

May 31, 2019

Roy was my uncle. His death left an impact on all of his family. Roy as well as the other Officers will never be forgotten.

Susan Hall
Roy Huskey was my uncle.

April 2, 2019

Time may have passed but you are not forgotten. I believe as long as someone remembers you or speaks your name, you are still with us.
Thank you for your heroism.
GOD Bless

Detention Officer A.Zambito
Texas

May 31, 2015

Thanks everyone for your reflections. Sheriff Huskey and Roy Huskey are my very close family members, your reflections have been read and are greatly appreciated.

anonymous
Family member.

October 24, 2014

On this day, the 35th anniversary of that dark day in Rutherford County Law Enforcement history. My heart goes out to the families of these three brave men that made the ultimate sacrifice 35 years ago today. May you all rest in peace.

Deputy Sheriff Jordan Chapman
Rutherford County Sheriff's Office

May 31, 2014

Thank you for your Heroism Sir, RIP

James Kotke
Civilian / Former Officer
WSF Park Police (Wi.)

May 31, 2012

To Captain Huskey;

I am from the Asheville area and I was only four and a half years old when this tragedy happened, but I learned about it years later and have studied up on it since then. I am also glad that I have been able to contribute to your memorial. For a long time the memorial page did not have a photograph of you or Seargent Messersmith, and I finally found them on Green Hill Fire Department's website, to which I notified the ODMP.

2009 has been a bad year for law enforcement. Oakland California, Pittsburgh Pennsylvania and Lakewood Washington have all had mass officer shootings this year. Ironically when I learned of the Lakewood shootings I was researching the Newhall Incident involving the California Highway Patrol.

God Bless You sir and say hello to your brother Sheriff Damon Huskey who finally entered into God's rest on May 17, 2004.

Michael Roberts
Former Police Officer

December 7, 2009

Your heroism and service is honored today, the 30th anniversary of your death. Your memory lives and you continue to inspire. Thank you for your service to my home state and the birthplace of my son. My cherished son Larry Lasater was a fellow police officer who was murdered in the line of duty on April 24, 2005 while serving as a
Pittsburg, CA police officer.

Time never diminishes respect. Your memory will always be honored and revered. Rest In Peace.

What a devastating blow to your families and your agencies to lose three officers in one incident.

Phyllis Loya

Anonymous

May 31, 2009

Deputy Huskey, thank you for yur service and dedication to duty. I attended a memorial service today at the Rutherford Co. Sheriffs Dept. marking the 30th Anniversery of this tragic incident. Rest in peace brother you will never be forgotton

Ptl. P.D Robbins
Forest City Police Dept. Forest City, NC

May 31, 2009

To both Deputies and the Trooper involved in this incident,

The circumstances of this situation are among the most horrific on record of law officers dying in service to the people they serve. The actions of the individual slaying these officers is the work of the devil himself. No assignment has greater potential for unexpected violence than response to a family argument. While numerous calls flood the dispatch of any police agency this call might lead in number. The rage of the individual(s) involved threaten those in the home and can quickly be diverted to the one called to bring peace. The dedication and the courage shown by these officers is a testimony of selfless service not only to the community at large, but to one another in law enforcement who must always be ready to take care of our own. Courage, Dedication, Valor and Honor speak for these officers now and they deem them all Heros among Heros. A legion of law officers who have made this sacrifice before you all await your arrival on the Evergreen Shores of Eternity. As both a retired Pennsylvania state trooper and a Lake County (FL) deputy sheriff I render to you a final salute.

Cpl. Ralph D. Fiorenza (Ret.)
Pennsylvania State Police

September 4, 2008

Deputy Huskey your work as we know it on this Earth is done. You are in God's Hands now brother. May you rest in peace.

SGT. Daryl Brewer
Clarksville Police Dept. Clarksville, Tennessee

June 2, 2008

"The Badge"

He starts his shift each day
To respond to calls unknown.
He drives a marked patrol car.
A police officer he is known.

He's paid by the citizens' taxes
To make it safe on the streets.
But he usually has a second job
'Cause a waitress has his salary beat.

Now he doesn't know a holiday
'Cause he works all year round.
And when Thanksgiving and Christmas finally arrive
At his home he cannot be found.

He's cursed and assaulted often,
The one whos blood runs blue.
He seldom ever gets a thanks,
To some he's just a fool.

His friends are always other cops
'Cause people just don't understand
That underneath his badge and gun,
He's just another man.

He knows there might not be a tomorrow
In this world of drugs and crime.
And he gets so mad at the court system
'Cause the crooks don't get any time.

And each day when he leaves for work,
He prays to God above.
Please bring me home after my shift
So I can see the ones I love.

But tonight he stops a speeding car,
He's alone down this ole' highway.
It's just a little traffic infraction.
He does it everyday.

Well, he walks up to the driver's window,
And his badge is shining bright.
He asked the guy for a driver's license,
When a shot rang through the night.

Yes, the bullet hit its mark,
Striking the officer in the chest.
But the Department's budget didn't buy
Each officer a bullet-proof vest.

So he lay on the ground bleeding.
His blood wasn't blue - His blood was red.
And briefly he thought of his loved ones
'Cause in a moment the officer was dead.

In the news they told the story
Of how this officer had died.
And some who listened cared less,
But those who loved him cried.

Well, they buried him in uniform
With his badge pinned on his chest.
He even had his revolver,
He died doing his best.

Written By:
David L. Bell
Sergeant
Richland County Sheriff's Department
Columbia, South Carolina
Used with Special Permission of the Author
Copyright © 1999 - All Rights Reserved
and may not be duplicated without permission

Investigator David L Bell
Richland County Sheriff's Dept., Columbia, SC

December 27, 2007

I stop by this website often after the death of two dear friends with the NCSHP (Troopers Calvin Taylor E.O.W. October 3, 2001 and Anthony Cogdill E.O.W. May 30, 2003).

We all grieve over the lives lost in the line of duty. I hope you can find some comfort knowing that there are countless prayers that go out for your family.

These are senseless tragedies that never seem to stop. God Bless the men and women who continue to serve their communities in our great Nation.

...Gone, but never Forgotten....

Marti (EMT-Paramedic)
Haywood Co EMS (NC)

April 5, 2004

"It is not the critic who counts,
Not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles
or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.

The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena,
whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood,
who strives valiantly,
who errs and comes short again and again because there is
no effort without error and shortcomings,
who knows the great devotion,
who spends himself in a worth cause,
who at best knows in the end the high achievement of
triumph and
who at worst, if he fails while daring greatly, knows his place
shall never be with those timid and cold souls who know
neither victory nor defeat."

- Theodore Roosevelt

In memory of Deputies Messersmith and Huskey and Trooper Peterson ... Gone but not forgotten.
May 31, 2003

Anonymous

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