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A Call For Unity | Yesterday In Santa Cruz

Monday 16th December 2024

Monday June 8th, 2020

Yesterday in Santa Cruz, I cried at the vigil for Sargent Damon Gutzwiller, of the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s department.

He was shot to death on Saturday.

Yesterday in Santa Cruz, I paddled out for George Floyd.

With over 500 people (A paddle out is how surfers mourn).

There have been paddle outs for George Floyd all over the world. Yesterday in the Ocean of Santa Cruz, people of many races screamed “Black Lives Matter”.

Together.

Yesterday the people of Santa Cruz showed that you can stand against evil racism, and stand for good cops.

At the same time.

Because both are the same thing.

Both are stand against violence.

Both are stand against evil.

Yesterday in Santa Cruz, I cried for these two men. And so did countless others. Of virtually every race.

Of all the tears that were cried yesterday in Santa Cruz, every single last one of them, was colorless.

Now, I’d like to share a deeply personal story with you.

A story I have never shared before.

Last year, one of my best friends was brutally murdered, in Santa Cruz.

It will always be unbelievable and unbearable.

A walk-through fire I wish on no one.

If you are ever in this situation, you’ll discover how badly you need the cops.

In the moments after I learned what happened,

I was overcome by a Mavericks sized wave of horrible emotions and a profound sense of helplessness.

Which is not a feeling I am used to.

Sometimes, life gives you no choice.

You have to grapple with a soul-crushing reality.

You have to accept an absoluteness you cannot change.

As this washed over me, I realized something.

I desperately need the cops.

Because police have the authority and ability to solve heinous crimes in a way that no one else does.

In our case, the agency in charge was the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Department.

After 231 days, over 3,000 hours of work, by countless professionals, across multiple peacekeeping agencies, in multiple states, the Sheriff’s Department caught them.

The four evil men took my brother’s life.

Now, you should know, he was a “brown guy” (his words).

The four men who killed him are white.

Over the past months, I’ve had a front-row seat to a massive, complex murder investigation.

He’s what I learned.

There are legendary cops.

A lot of them.

The dedicated public servants at the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Department, lead by Sheriff Jim Hart, worked tirelessly to bring this evil to justice.

We saw the sleepless nights the investigators endured.

They fought as hard as I have ever seen anyone fight.

We are forever grateful for the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Department.

If I were to name all of the amazing people who worked in this case, you’d stop reading this post.

What I’d like you to know is, they cried with us.

They comforted us.

They exhibited extraordinary kindness.

Above all, we got to see peacekeepers with an unending commitment to justice.

I share this with you because I have experienced the positive power of policing.

I have seen women and men, of every race, get up every day, put on a bulletproof vest and a badge to risk their lives.

To serve and protect us.

So, the time has come for all of us to demand justice for George Floyd.

To demand equality for African Americans and all people of color.

And to demand real police reform.

It is critical that we remember, that it is possible to demand justice for George Floyd, to demand reform and equality, and support the good cops.

At the same time.

There are some in our country who would divide us.

Let us remember there is no us and them.

There is no difference between Black, White, Brown or Blue.

Because evil comes in all colors.

And tears are colorless.

Bless you.