Part of a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s job
is notifying next of kin when a person dies in a car crash. One trooper
remembers a mother collapse in a doorway. Another caught a mother crumpling to
the floor. This is the final story in the four-part series involving KHP death notifications.
‘They know why you’re there’
Technical Trooper Nick Wright |
Technical
Trooper Nick Wright recalls a crash where a 17-year-old had been killed because a
16-year-old crossed into his lane and struck him head-on just before he was to
exit. She was allegedly speeding and texting.
It
was Wright’s first death notification in which he was the lead investigator.
What Wright remembers most is the follow-up investigation a day or two later at
a home where some of the 17-year-old’s family had gathered. Maybe 15 people
joined around a dining room table – all of their eyes on him. He remembers the
father saying he couldn’t sleep. The father was obsessed about how the girl
came to be where she was when she lost control. Wright recalls them being a
loving, forgiving family.
Now,
every time Wright drives past the cross put up near where the two cars collided
– it’s a neatly weeded roadside memorial, “I think about it,” he said.
In
another crash, a young man had become intoxicated and was found in his wrecked
SUV at the bottom of a steep embankment. After he died, Wright and his patrol
partner pulled up outside the mother’s home. She was standing at the screen
door. When she saw the troopers, she collapsed to her knees. “They know why
you’re there,” he said of those moments.
He
introduces himself the same way every time: “Hey, I’m Trooper Wright. Can I
come inside?”
With
the grieving mother, he remembers getting her tissue from the kitchen and maybe
a glass of water. Still, years later, he can see her home. “I could almost draw
the inside of her house.”
He
was relieved when a chaplain showed up to help comfort her. He explains that
when giving death notifications, he and another trooper go in as a pair. “We
kind of pick who’s saying the words before we go there.” He’s been with the KHP
for 16 years now. So he feels like he should offer to say “the words” to the
loved ones if he’s with a less experienced trooper. It’s part of his
personality, he said. He’s a greeter at church. “I’m kind of a people person.”
About
“the words”: “You cut straight to the chase,” he said. If he’s notifying a
young woman that her father has died in a crash, for example, he’ll say it as
clearly and clinically as possible: “I’m really sorry to tell you, but your
dad’s been killed in a crash.”
The
reactions vary. Some loved ones pass out, some fall, some sob, some deny it,
some get angry. Anything can happen.
“You learn to talk to people,” he said. “You
are greatly affecting these people’s lives.”
He
remembers hugging a family before he left. Most people in law enforcement, he
noted, don’t hug on the job. Still, he said, “You can’t be robotic. You just
have to be a person to them. You are delivering the worst news to this person.
There’s no good way you can do it. … I remember choking back tears.”
Thanks, Trooper Wright, for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteTrooper Wright, thank you for sharing. Family members who have lost loved ones in crashes are surely appreciative of your soft, sensitive delivery of the tragic news.
ReplyDeleteThese tragic deaths seem especially hard to take when it's a young person who chooses to engage in dangerous actions behind the wheel. No one is invincible.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your service to the Kansas community. As a former EMT, I know death notifications are the most difficult of any responsibility a person may have. Blessings, sir.
ReplyDelete