Posted on 03/26/2025 12:15:43 PM PDT by Morgana
In Harris County, Texas, four sheriff's deputies (one current and three former) have committed suicide in six weeks. Psychologists attribute this to the specifics of law enforcement work.
Devastating tragedies in Texas, USA. The funeral of a former employee of the Harris County Sheriff's Office is the 4th case related to suicide.
UNN reports with reference to The Mirror.
Details
In the past six weeks, four Harris County Sheriff's deputies in Houston, Texas, one active and three former, have committed suicide.
On Thursday, loved ones and colleagues said goodbye to Deputy Christina Kohler, a former employee of the Harris County Sheriff's Office. Three other sheriff's representatives also committed suicide. Who is mentioned in the disappointing statistics
In addition to 37-year-old Deputy Kohler, who was initially reported missing two weeks ago before being found dead on March 13, there are also three people:
Former Harris County Sheriff's Deputy Maria Vasquez, who left the department in December, also committed suicide
Former Deputy William Bozeman was found dead under similar circumstances
Former Deputy Long Nguyen, 58, committed suicide on February 6.
Dr. Thomas McNees, director of the behavioral health department of the Harris County Sheriff's Office, explained how working in the field can affect an officer's mental health:
(Excerpt) Read more at unn.ua ...
Something isn’t right here.
Very sad. What did they all know...that was worth ending their lives, to them?
Harris County is the swamp pit of TX.
explained how working in the field can affect an officer’s mental health:
Just in Harris County, apparently...
Maybe they were on duty during the January 6th insurrection or maybe they were associates of Hillary Clinton. I know those things will cause people to kill themselves.
Somebody somewhere is snitching and its somebody somewhere all three knew the snitch is telling about them.
If really true and not some coverup.
Then this is an evil spirit at work.
I know the left likes to change the language all the time but the word 'victim' here is not appropriate.
I retire after 25 years in federal law enforcement and yes I knew 5 or 6 guys who offed themselves over my career. None of them did it because of the job, it was always outside pressures like financial hardship, health issues or family breakdowns.
More so than most, LEOs need a stable home environment to deal with the insanity they deal with every day in the field.
Interesting hypothesis.
These departments and outside entities get together and create these “suicide prevention” programs. They are a joke. They get a bunch of chiefs/sheriffs (most big city chiefs are DEI), city/county/state politicians (and some federal elected jerks), community activist (who hate police), and expensive consultants who then come up with these programs. Stupid crap like tell your partners you are having trouble or tell someone if your partner is having problems. They say it is all confidential and get treatment anonymously. Bull-crap.
Everyone below the rank of sergeant knows full well that nobody above them has their back and will drop them in the grease. They face days off, losing the privilege of being armed (basically desk job), no promotions, loss of job and/or pension, so they keep it quiet and boom. They feel helpless and know that nobody cares.
The very people that are the problem, leadership and outside uninformed dweebs are the problem and get to create the programs, which don’t work, are expensive and get these chiefs on paid vacation to conferences and such to chat, but the feel good and can say “we care about our officers”.
May be what caused it?.
What they ALL knew.
I’d like to see the statistics of this happening..the odds...has anything remotely close to this number happened before?
In one area? Aside from a scandal?
Something’s wrong.
That being said, it doesn’t mean, as far as we know, that they did anything wrong and it’s a terrible tragedy.
58 though? Retired a while, I would assume
must have saw weiner’s laptop </soff>
The Harris County Sheriff's Office, founded in 1837, is the largest sheriff's office in Texas and the third-largest in the nation. The HCSO has nearly 5,100 employees and 200 volunteer reservists dedicated to ensuring the safety of more than 4.1 million residents who call Harris County home.
Not saying that something is not wrong but the numbers are not badly out of line with normal suicide rates.
Carlos Danger?
What did they know about Hillary and when did they threaten to expose it?
Cartel pressure or actual cartel wet work?
Investigation ... probably what caused the suicides. It’s Harris County, one of the most corrupt in the state outside of Travis County (Austin).
takes foreign news sources to tell us what’s going on.
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