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UPDATED: Fallen SCV hero remembered
Deputy died Friday after a four-year struggle



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Dep. Jerry Newbold, an SCV Sheriff's deputy based in Gorman, provided us this view from the inside:

"I was in awe today as several Sheriff's patrol cars drove through city streets with their red lights flashing.

"It was a funeral procession for one of their own fallen comrades. I saw a woman who was jogging stop on Seco Canyon Road and place her hand over her heart until the entire line of cars had passed.

"I saw CHP officers who had blocked traffic at the junction stand at attention and salute as the cars passed.

"I saw three young women exit their place of employment and stand at the curb with their hands over their hearts.

"As the procession passed the fire station on Railroad Street, I saw numerous firemen standing out front, once again, at attention and saluting.

"I noticed that cars driving on the opposite side of the street were stopped to honor the deputy...

"You see, I was one of those Deputy Sheriffs riding along in the procession, and in all my 26 years of service, I couldn't have been prouder of what I do for a living."

 

By Melissa Gasca and Brian Charles
Signal Staff Writers
Posted: Oct. 30, 2008  8:57 p.m.

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Family, friends, and more than 100 uniformed deputies gathered Friday to mourn the death and celebrate the life of Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Deputy Randy Hamson.

“He had a servant’s heart,” said Tim Hamson, Randy’s brother and a Los Angeles city firefighter. “I admire my brother. Randy Hamson is my best friend.”

Hamson died after a four-year struggle to recover from injuries suffered during a 2004 traffic stop. He graduated from the sheriff’s academy five years prior to his accident.

The tone of the service was often upbeat as Pastor Francis Chan, sheriff’s officials, deputies, Santa Clarita Mayor Bob Kellar, Hamson’s brother and friends shared fond and humorous memories of Hamson.

“We can understand Randy believed God loved him. The day when Randy was baptized that’s what he was saying,” said Chan, who baptized Hamson two years before the accident. “Randy is in a very, very safe place. God says I will create a safe place for you. Randy changed his address; he did not change his life.”

Those who spoke of Hamson attested to the inspiring dedication he carried to his faith, family and duties.

“Santa Clarita has lost a great friend and we are mourning his loss,” Kellar said. “Hamson stood out amongst us because he made it his life to give us the American dream.”

The news of Hamson’s death Friday hit Santa Clarita Valley sheriff’s deputies hard, a sheriff’s official said.

“I was on duty that night (of the accident),” said Sheriff’s Station secretary Millena Hicks, who attended the ceremony.

“I took his (crash) report just before receiving the call. I was devastated. He was my friend.”

Hamson was investigating a traffic collision along a poorly lighted stretch of Sierra Highway Aug. 16, 2004.

Hamson used his flashlight to get the attention of a motorist not using headlights, Cambra said. As Hamson waved his flashlight at the car, another vehicle struck him, she said.

“Hamson sustained major head injuries and battled for his life every day from the time he was hospitalized until his death,” Cambra said.

“(Hamson) had the biggest smile in the world,” Detective Hans Schneider said. Hamson and Schneider met in 2002 at the Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station. “He just brightened your day,” Schneider said.

Schneider felt mixed emotions when he learned of Hamson’s death.

“It’s been a tough four years for everyone,” he said. But he chooses to remember all that was good about Hamson.

“He was truly enjoyable to work with and he loved working for the people of Santa Clarita,” Schneider said.

After the ceremony, a motorcade escorted the hearse carrying Hamson's body to Eternal Valley Memorial Park on Sierra Highway in Newhall, where he was buried.










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