In Memoriam

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This page is dedicated to officers who have made the ultimate sacrifice while serving and protecting City of Carlsbad residents.

Officer Wesley S. Fox Wesley S. Fox

End of Watch: Feb. 13, 1978

On February 13, 1978, Officer Wesley Stuart Fox was dispatched to an industrial burglary alarm. While he was responding, Officer Fox lost control of his patrol unit on a rain and mud covered roadway and collided with another vehicle. He died a short time later at a local hospital.

Wesley was born on September 24, 1945, at Jamaica Hospital in Queens, N.Y. Wesley graduated from Rio Hondo College on June 11, 1970, with an Associate in Arts degree. While attending Rio Hondo College, he majored in psychology. Wes furthered his education by attending California State University Fullerton, earning his bachelor of arts degree in sociology on June 8, 1973.

On September 18, 1973, Wesley married Colby Ann Attridge in San Clemente, Calif. Less than a year later, Wesley successfully completed the Carlsbad Police Officer Reserve Academy on August 3, 1974, and also graduated from the FBI Law Officers Training School in Carlsbad in September 1974.

Prior to becoming a City of Carlsbad police officer, Wesley was employed by a local psychiatric clinic as a mental health worker and as a psychiatric assistant in Rosemead, Calif. Wesley also held a position as a karate instructor for a studio in Whittier, Calif. Wesley is survived by his wife, Colby, of Port Townsend, WA, and his father, Leon, of Oceanside, CA.


Officer William R. "Billy" JackWilliam R. "Billy" Jack

End of Watch: Sept. 1, 1991

The frame around his police motorcycle license plate read, "One more ticket and I get the microwave." Billy Jack never got his microwave, but in three years with City of Carlsbad Police Department, he won hundreds of friends.

Nearly 1,200 people, including more than 600 uniformed officers, gathered at Carlsbad Community Church to say farewell to William "Billy" Robert Jack. The 30-year-old traffic officer, known to his colleagues as Billy Jack and "Billy the Kid," died September 1, 1991, of head injuries after being thrown from his motorcycle while on duty. He had been directing traffic after a Labor Day weekend concert when he lost control of his motorcycle, hit a center divider and crashed.

The joke on his license plate was typical of Jack's sense of humor, friends said, but hardly reflected his serious dedication to his job. Police Chief Bob Vales didn't sanction the microwave joke when he discovered it, but he decided to risk offending citizens and let Jack keep it. "I'm glad I did," Vales said during the funeral service. "When I had the Billy Jacks of the world working for me, my job was a lot easier."

Kids loved Jack, Vales said, and Jack loved playing the part of crime-fighting dog McGruff, running a bicycle safety class, and taking time to meet children around the city.

Jack was born in San Jose on Feb. 28, 1961, and graduated from high school in Falmouth, Mass. in 1979. He worked for the Orange County Sheriff's Department before joining the department in 1988, where he was assigned to its traffic division in April. He was engaged to marry Tina Cunniff of Oceanside, CA.

Jack is survived by his mother, Annine Jack, of Oceanside; father, Kenneth Jack, of Escondido; brothers Curtis Jack of Oceanside and Douglas Jack, of Lake Buena Vista, Florida; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. James H. Jack of Southbury, Connecticut.