Family, Friends & Fellow Officers Remember...

Police Officer William Coleman Cook

Metro-Dade Police Department, Florida

End of Watch Wednesday, May 16, 1979

Leave a Reflection

Reflections for Police Officer William Coleman Cook

All over the bouquets of roses, O death, I cover you over with roses and lilies, but mostly and now the lilac that blooms the first, Copious I break, I break the sprigs from the bushes, with loaded arms I come, pouring for you, for you and the coffin of yourself, O death. Officer Cook, there were plenty of floral arrangements sent in for your visitation and burial service. But their was more than that and that was the emotional outpouring of the community you so dearly loved and served with professionalism the entire six years of your watch. You probably would have cried if you knew how many people, how many officers came from all over to pay their respects to you and your wonderfully loving and giving family. You were a true Godsend to the Metro-Dade Police family, Officer Cook and your tragic passing has left all of them still beside themselves wondering why did this happen to a truly humane, sensitive and passionate gentleman? Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 16, 2013

Off with your hat as the flag goes by! and let the heart have its say; you're man enough for a tear in your eye that you will not wipe away. All hats stayed on as your comrades saluted your flag draped casket as you, Officer Cook, were being taken into St. Mary's Cathedral one last time for your Inspector's Funeral where there was no dry eye only plenty of somberness and sorrow for a man who was a true hero indeed. And in the end as they played taps, the National Anthem and gave you a gun salute before laying you to rest and a final salute for your bravery and courage as the thirteenth Metro-Dade Police Officer to give their life in the line of duty. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 16, 2013

We are afraid of truth, afraid of fortune, afraid of death and afraid of each other. You were not afraid of truth, as you were raised to only speak the truth. You lived humbly growing up and faced those terrible circumstances with grace and humility right down until your last breath and that is why, Officer Cook you will be forever remembered. If something was on your mind, you told it like it is, you did not beat around the bush. Police officers all have this motto and that is to serve and protect. Not run and hide and be dishonest with the public trust. There is a reason why we are supposed to trust officers and speak to them in a civil fashion. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 16, 2013

And I will show you something different from either your shadow at morning striding behind you or your shadow at evening rising to meet you; I will show you fear in a handful of dust. Police officers are showed a lot of different situations and the various circumstances on why they happen. When you went out on your first patrol, Officer Cook, I'm sure you had a certain amount of apprehension, but as you gained the knowledge and experience in how to properly deal with each dilemma, your confidence became more clearer and you were able to visualize how to handle problems in the correct and proper manner with dignity, integrity and compassion. Heroes like yourself really do exist and we must make and take the time to pause, salute and reflect back on your life and career. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 16, 2013

The outward wayward of life we see, the hidden springs we may not know....it is ours to separate the tangled skein of will and fate. God's will directs officer each day and God's judgment rests in how every officer performs his or her duties. You faithfully performed your duties, Officer Cook and now, God is leading you on another important mission: to help Him protect those officers who expose their lives to evil. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 16, 2013

The bitterest tragic element in life from an intellectual source is the belief in a brute fate or destiny, which we may be partial, but fate is not. All officers we hope live by their faiths and are honorable men and women such as yourself, Officer Cook, to live by morals and a code of ethics, to give up your existence to make us all feel safer. Simply put, they don't make officers such as yourself who do what needs to be done. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero. I meant to say my mother required surgery and thank God recovered and I also meant to use the words you and will in a statement that you and your fellow Metro-Dade Officers will always be relevant and are to be saluted for serving your community with honor and dedication.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 14, 2013

The security and elevation of the family and of family life are the prime objects of civilization and the ultimate ends of all industry. Your family, Officer Cook and Karen, were always number one in your life. They knew your fondness and the passion which you brought to your position when you left each day never knowing what might, God forbid happen. They knew how sincere police work was to you and the connections you made from your department. Families always wonder and pray for their loved ones when they go to work. A short story, my neighbor, friend and hero, Officer Cook. My family lived in Cambria Heights, New York, where my father, Owen Charles Davis, he should rest in peace was a police officer. I was seven months old and there was an accident in my home in which my mother Bernice, was burned. Luckily, workers were in the home and she was hospitalized for eight weeks. Nothing happened to my dad on duty, as I was staying with my Aunt Lilly, she too should rest in peace, who took care of me. She required surgery. God is always watching us and He too watches over you as you rest in peace.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

If you will observe, it doesn't take a man of giant mold to make a giant shadow on the wall; and he who in our daily sight seems but a figure mean and small, outlined in fame's illusive light, may stalk, a silhouette sublime, across the canvas of his time. It sounds like one terrific officer whose name was associated with honor and proper respect due his position. You were, Officer Cook, the thinking man's officer. You always be fondly saluted for your gallantry. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Sleep on, O brave-hearted, O wise man that kindled the flame-to live in mankind is far more than to live in a name. You name with always be relevant for forevermore, Officer Cook. They made shirts with the names of your forty-one other comrades who died for peace and unity in Dade County. Your intellect, your inspiration will always serve as our motivation to do the job correctly and keep a smile on your face with compassion. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Let the thick curtain fall; I better know than all, how little I have gained, how vast the unattained. You attained greatness in your department, Officer Cook, because of your achievements garnered with humility and grace. Your colleagues were very grateful for the opportunity to serve with you. You made us all glad to known such a fine police officer who always went by the book. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

And nothing to look backward to with pride. And nothing to look forward to with hope. The greatest accomplishment is not in never falling, but in rising again after you fall. The probability that we may fall in the struggle ought not deter us from the support of a cause we believe to be just; it shall not deter me. Well we can look back with pride because of how you handled yourself, Officer Cook, for all those years working rigorously under the pressures that accompany your position. Let us go forward as you my neighbor, friend and hero would want us to do and not lay back feeling sorry for ourselves. That is not how a person gets ahead in life. Rest in peace.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Our whole way of life today is dedicated to the removal of risk. Cradle to grave we are supported, insulated and isolated from the risks of life-and if we fall, our government stands ready with bandages of every size. Unfortunately, we cannot permanently take away dangers officers confront today or back centuries ago. Officer Cook, you faced all the dangers head on and squared your shoulders to confront the wickedness and callous act of one young man who desperately needed help. You were a brave soul until the end and because of sacrifice, you are now cradled in God's hands forever. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

A moment's insight is sometimes worth a life's experience. Experience is the name everyone gives their mistakes. One thorn of experience is worth a whole wilderness of warning. On your watch, Officer Cook, you were generally very careful and observant. Officers don't always receive a second chance to correct a mistake and so they must at all times be on guard. Man's capabilities have never been measured; nor are we to judge of what he can do by any precedents, so little has been tried. I'm sure your department, as well as other departments look into how they can deal with the type of problem that cost you your life and how to further improve officer safety and efficiency. You were a true hero to protect and save your comrades from further harm as well as the three civilians. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

All experience is an arch to build upon. The years teach much which the days never know. All these years have taught us that if we looked back and researched your outstanding career, Officer Cook, we would find out what a superior person you were and the character of your persona which made you one of the top officers of your time. A great part of courage is the courage of having done the thing before. You started out as a public safety officer at Jackson Memorial Hospital, if I'm correct and then when you turned twenty you joined after completion of the police academy at Miami-Dade North, the ranks of the Metro-Dade Police Department where you provided invaluable and loyal service for the next six years. All good. All honorable. All served with dignity and a supreme amount of integrity. No one is perfect, but if one could cast a model of the prototype of police officer, the department dearly needs, it would be you my neighbor, friend and hero, Officer William C. Cook, Badge#1664. Rest in peace.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Cause and effect are two sides of one fact. Cause and effect, means and ends, seed and fruit, cannot be severed; for the effect already blooms in the cause, the end pre-exists in the means, the fruit in the seed. Officer Cook, for six distinguished years with the Metro-Dade Police Department, you brought about this cause and effect. Your carried it wherever you went. Your character and the humbleness in how you lived your life with your beloved wife, Karen, now travels with you up in the heavens above. A person's good name and the deeds that they performed in this world will always precede you. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

A fire-mist and a planet, a crystal and a cell, a jellyfish and a saurian, and caves where the cavemen dwell; then a sense of law and beauty, and a face turned from the clod-some call it evolution, and others call it God. Your beautiful being, Officer Cook is now with God and we still, those who knew you and loved you so dearly can envision your smiling face. The memories of you will live on forever wherever your loved ones travel. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Evolution is fascinating to watch. To me it is most interesting when one can observe the evolution of a single man. Your family and close friends and comrades witnessed your evolution from a young man to a very mature adult so capable and competent in all his abilities. You were that kind of person, Officer Cook and a high caliber of a duly skilled law enforcement official. You gave one-hundred percent every moment and will always be saluted for this. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

In the collective life of man, at least, most evil arises because finite men involved in the flux of time pretend that they are not so involved. They make claims of virtue, of wisdom, and of power which are beyond their competence as creatures. These pretensions are the source of evil, whether they are expressed by kings and emperors or by commissars and revolutionary statesmen. You were a representative of your department, Officer Cook and you were governed by rules and regulations of your department. You followed these rules and served Dade County with a clear and present conscience at all times. Your role in battling evil is now and has been complete. Now my neighbor, friend and hero, your eternal role along with all the other officers who have made the ultimate sacrifice as you is to watch over those in this world serving us and trying to take away the stench of evil permeating this land. Rest in peace.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Evil springs up and flowers and bears no seed and feeds the green earth with its swift decay, leaving it richer for the growth of truth. That why dedicated men and women such as yourself, Officer Cook serve us with honor and distinction in the law enforcement profession. Truth and justice, fairness and compassion are expected at all times from all officers. Your quality character depicted these traits to your community in which you gave your life for its protection. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero. Flowers will continue to blossom as your loving soul ascends God's giant ladder to the heavens above.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 13, 2013

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending spiral of destruction....The chain reaction of evil-hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars-must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation. Officers such as you, Officer Cook, are very well bred in how to deal with all adversities that may come your way. Day after day, night after night, your performance was superior and your valor was superb. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero. We can only see your shining soul which we hope and pray will someday eliminate this abyss of evil in our society.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 12, 2013

No man is justified in doing evil on the ground of expediency. Evil is here in the world, not because God wants it or uses it here, but because He knows not how at the moment to remove it; or knowing, has not the skill or power to achieve His end. Evil, therefore, is a fact not to be explained away, but to be accepted and accepted not to be endured, but to be conquered. It is a challenge neither to our reason nor to our patience, but to our courage. Very powerful words, Officer Cook. If God does not have the power or skill to achieve an end to this ,then how can law enforcement personnel conquer this? You tried to stop a domestic dispute before it got out of hand and until your last breath succeeded mightily. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero. God can only assist a person so much, they have to make the commitment to try and accomplish on their own merits.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 12, 2013

Some men wish evil and accomplish it, but most men, when they work in that machine just let it happen somewhere in the wheels. The fault is no decisive villainous knife, but the dull saw that is the routine mind. You only wanted for people to be safe, Officer Cook. It was a pity that evil cost you your life and robbed you of your innocence. No one will ever say a bad word of you and I'll only and forever display as we all should the proper reverence that is due you. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 12, 2013

Beneath thy broad, impartial eye, how fade the lines of caste and birth! How equal in their suffering lie the groaning multitudes of earth! You took your commitment and excellence for those you served, Officer Cook, to a higher level. Your quality of work was already well-documented and the superior fashion in which you dedicated yourself to those in need can never be copied again. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 12, 2013

In a state where the citizens are all practically equal, it becomes difficult for them to preserve their independence against aggressions of power. This is why we have so many excellently trained and talented personnel like you, Officer Cook. You represent all people regardless of color, religion, ethnicity, education and financial status. A humble and a duly engrained officer who went the the extra mile to make each of us safer and more secure. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 12, 2013

In a recent reflection I meant to say Washington, D. C. Now I spelled it properly. One of my favorite places to visit. We hate to see people standing too much above ourselves; we never endure it patiently. In practical life we never submit to it. We either grow up to the advanced people, or we pull the advanced people down. This too with all you had going around yourself, Officer Cook, had to do and that was make each person feel special and good about themselves. Rest in peace my neighbor, friend and hero.

Rabbi Lewis S. Davis

June 12, 2013

Want even more control of your Reflection? Create a free ODMP account now for these benefits:

  • Quick access to your heroes
  • Reflections published quicker
  • Save a Reflection signature
  • View, edit or delete any Reflection you've left in the past

Create an account for more options, or use this form to leave a Reflection now.