NYPD Delivers a Cop Christmas for Special-Needs Boy

By: - December 25, 2018

Aidan Riley is a 16-year-old boy who is confined to a wheelchair stemming from cerebral palsy. Aidan’s dad is a NYPD cop. Like most cops’ children, Aidan longs to be a police officer himself. Given his debilitating condition, however, that does not seem plausible. So the staff of the New York City Police Department got as close as they could to help fulfill that dream; they pooled together contributions and ordered a specially-engineered custom-made NYPD RMP (radio motor patrol) cruiser, an exact replica of what Aidan’s dad and most of the other 36,000-plus NYC cops use to cruise around the Big Apple.

Including authentic red rotating lights atop the roof, with Aidan’s specially-equipped wheelchair fitting precisely in the cabin of his very own NYPD cop car, he can tool around and feel the feeling his dad feels on the job.

Assigned to the Midtown South Precinct, NYPD police Officer Merritt Riley is part of the contingent of cops who patrol “the southern portion of Midtown, Manhattan” which encompasses “commercials offices, hotels, Times Square, Grand Central Terminal, Penn Station, Madison Square Garden, Koreatown section, and the Manhattan Mall Plaza.” Having grown up in NYC, those locations and environments can sizzle and boil on a 24-hour basis, keeping the precinct police officers hopping from call to call.

Consider the rapid pace and the kind of workload NYPD cops know all too well, and it may engender thoughts of not only the special care required for his son Aidan but also the acute attention given by Officer Riley to his constituents in an area teaming with myriad folks from all over the globe. My point is his super-capacity to relate differently. As a dad to an intensely autistic daughter, I found this to be true when I served in a police uniform. Fortuitously or otherwise, I was assigned most of the calls in which a parent or guardian was having difficulty with an autistic child or adult. The dynamics are quite unique and, at that time in my career, information regarding both the rudimentary pertaining to autism and the complexity of some isolated cases was not as prevalent. If I didn’t know, I spent the time with the complainant and researched answers. Or I went back to the caller as soon as practicable.

Conversely, I never anticipated people to readily understand my daughter’s affliction. I was learning then; I am learning still. Officer Riley hinted at such a thing when he said “…we always try to help people. So, when someone reaches out to help you, it’s not a comfortable feeling.” I can interpret that candid statement in a few ways, and I do not believe he meant anything negative in his words. To the contrary, it implies the rarity of receiving kind gestures and help. Grace and humility was his telegraph. I experienced what Riley did. It sort of came as a surprise when anyone made attempts to get close and offer some semblance of help, even if it were a passing smile and/or a nod. Did my family experience the cold, standoffish, ignorant side of humanity? Yes, unfortunately. Have we been asked to leave premises because of my child’s outbursts stemming from autism? Yes, including churches.

Was my daughter bullied, badgered and made fun of at school? Sadly, yes. And a school resource officer nipped that nonsense right in the bud.

Attempts at sitting as a family and having a meal in restaurants always resulted in a bust, often literally with something busted by my daughter. The complexity of autism I referenced earlier includes severe tantrums whereby flailing sometimes results in property damage. Paid the tab and paid the damages. Despite onlookers’ ignorance and arrogance, life goes on.

Child comes first. And I suspect that is the philosophy with Officer Riley and his family. His tears of joy prove it. After all, what cop wouldn’t want to see his prodigy in police gear, even if it were modified to suit a young boy and render his heart happy? So a make-shift police car to elevate a young boy’s dreamscape was the featured order.

And the NYPD delivered!

That video-still from the beginning moments of the footage above depicts NYPD police Commissioner James P. O’Neill, indicating the NYPD’s investment in its personnel, their families, and any unique hardships they may be enduring. He seems to be admiring the craftsmanship of the replica NYPD cruiser.

Like father, like son. And it doesn’t get any more awe-inspiring to witness the smiles from a special-needs face complimented by his dad’s tears of contentment during a season if giving. Indeed, despite the job-related hardships and personal life circumstances endured by law enforcement officers, the blue family is strong and typifies pillars of formidable power when one of their brothers or sisters has a cross to bear, a burden to carry. It is one of many reasons I wished for a police career as a NYPD cop; the camaraderie there is intoxicating. Nonetheless, the cross I carried at the time (cancer) brought me to Florida where my badge was pinned and where my daughter was born with autism. Blue buddies here have done for my special-needs child what NYPD cops did for Officer Riley’s boy, Aidan for Christmas 2018.

As to that camaraderie among cops…I suspect Aidan knows that factor quite well, thanks to his dad and company.

  • RSS WND

    • Outrage erupts when authorities toss 2 farmers in prison on 30-day sentences
      A state legal action in Pennsylvania is sparking outrage, online and elsewhere, for the result it demanded: Two farmers arrested and jailed on 30-day sentences with no sentencing hearing and no option for bail. Authorities say that's the process they use for contempt charges, for which Ethan Wentworth of Airville, York County, and Rusty Herr… […]
    • Education secretary defends policy allowing biological males to use women's bathrooms, locker rooms
      (WORLD TRIBUNE) – Insisting that transgender students have been “under attack in our country,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona defended the newly instituted Team Biden policy which allows biological males to the use women’s bathrooms and locker rooms. During a Senate appropriations subcommittee hearing on Tuesday to review the FY2025 budget request for the Department of… […]
    • UCLA canceled requests for extra police days before violent clash between protesters
      Kate Anderson Daily Caller News Foundation The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) canceled a request for a larger police presence just before anti-Israel protests turned violent, according to the Los Angeles Times. Police on Wednesday broke up the encampment in which there had been violent clashes between protesters and counter-protesters, with at least one… […]
    • CEO offers jobs to anti-Israel agitators, hails their 'moral courage'
      (FOX BUSINESS) – The founder and CEO of telehealth and online pharmacy Hims took to social media on Wednesday to encourage anti-Israel protesters on college campuses to continue in those efforts because companies like his will be "eager" to hire them. Andrew Dudum, who founded Hims in 2017, said anti-Israel campus protesters are making a… […]
    • Major church removes rule that homosexuality is 'incompatible with Christian teaching'
      (CHRISTIAN POST) – The United Methodist Church General Conference has voted to remove a statement from its central rulebook that declared that homosexuality was "incompatible with Christian teaching." In a vote of 523 to 161 following around 90 minutes of debate on Thursday, the churchwide legislative gathering opted to remove a clause from the Book… […]
    • China: Christian man sentenced to 5 years in prison for selling, distributing Bible
      (WORTHY NEWS) – A Chinese court has sentenced a Christian man to five years imprisonment for selling and distributing Bibles in Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region in northern China, International Christian Concern (ICC) reports. Together with nine other Christians, Ban Yanhong was arrested in April 2021 for “illegally” selling and distributing Bibles in Hohhot, the… […]
    • 100-year-old veteran who served in 3 wars given long-awaited college diploma
      (BREITBART) – A 100-year-old veteran of three wars finally received something he had been waiting for since the 1960s in College Park, Maryland, on Tuesday. When Air Force Officer John “Jack” Milton earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Maryland Global Campus (UMGC) 58 years ago, he was very proud, 11 Alive reported. Get… […]
    • Man arrested for attacking his sister with fried chicken during argument
      (THE GATEWAY PUNDIT) – A Florida man was arrested for a crime that could be mistaken for a headline in the Onion or the Babylon Bee. As the Smoking Gun reported, 20-year-old Khanye Edrayieze Medley was arrested on Monday by Clearwater Police on a domestic battery charge. He allegedly got into a verbal altercation with… […]
    • Massive bee swarm shuts down baseball game, forced evacuations
      (TRENDING SUBJECT) – An unexpected delay occurred before the Arizona Diamondbacks took on the Los Angeles Dodgers on Tuesday night. The start of the game, originally scheduled for 7 p.m. local time, was postponed for more than 90 minutes due to a swarm of bees behind home plate. The situation caused a temporary evacuation of… […]
    • Judge blocks punishment for girl athletes who refused to compete against a boy
      By Kate Anderson Daily Caller News Foundation A West Virginia judge granted a preliminary injunction allowing several middle school girls to compete after the school district banned them from competition after refusing to play against a biological male, according to 12 WBOY, a local media outlet. Five middle school female athletes forfeited their positions at… […]
  • Enter My WorldView