GLADSTONE Police officers yesterday came out in force for the town’s Coffee with a Cop event. Senior Constable Wendy Brooks said people flooded into Muffin Break on Goondoon St, at 9am – to the point where many were forced to line up outside the corner cafe.
Windsor police took a break from the daily grind to enjoy some coffee and talk to residents about issues in the city core this afternoon at “Coffee with a Cop.”
Starbucks at 3322 N. Glassford Hill Road had a “new employee” for an hour and a half on Tuesday, Jan. 9. Sgt. Jason Kaufman, of the Prescott Valley Police Department Support Services Section, assumed the role of barista at the drive-thru window from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., during the monthly Coffee With a Cop event.
Eager to help bridge the gap between police and their community, Starbucks in Olde Tollgate Village in York Township welcomed Police Chief Tim Damon and Sgt. Pete Montgomery on Tuesday, Jan. 16, as they represented the department.
Join Coffee with a Cop co-founders and global brand managers Hawthorne California Police Captain Mike Ishii and Sergeant Chris Cognac for a two-hour training on how best to prepare and implement Coffee with a Cop at your Department.
The Wichita Police Department gave some Wichitans a little pick-me-up at the Towne East Square Mall Saturday morning. It was all part of the “Coffee with a Cop” program that helps to bring police and the community together to discuss issues and learn more about each other.
South Bend Police say they can’t stop crime without you! They are hoping events like “Cup with a Cop” will help you start a conversation with officers.
“That’s my goal with these meetings is to give community members a voice and to answer questions. The interest is for transparency. I just really want to make sure that everybody has a voice straight to the police. Being the leader of the organization that’s the plan, and I want to be sure I know what the community needs from us, the opinions, how we can help each other and obviously the goal of the police is to help the community with crime,” said Rosecrans as he introduced himself at the early morning meeting.
Police brass and community policing officers chatted with members of the public at Starbucks Friday morning at the department’s first “Coffee with a Cop” event of the new year.
“The police are reaching out to the community here, but people don’t want to always want to talk to the police. But if they would just come and sit down and talk, they would see that the officers are people and not animals, like some people think.”