By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂
District Park Ranger Pete Mitchum, with the 黑料天堂鈥 State Parks Division, was told to wear his Class A uniform to work recently, and he didn鈥檛 know why. He complied and found out that 黑料天堂 Conservation Enforcement Officers Association (ACEOA) President Vance Wood was on his way to meet him.
Wood, a Conservation Enforcement Lieutenant with the Department鈥檚 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division, showed up at Gulf State Park to present Mitchum with the ACEOA Enforcement Officer of the Year Award.
鈥淭hat was kind of a surprise,鈥 Mitchum said. 鈥淲hile we are not conservation officers, we are officers who work for the Conservation Department. The ACEOA covers the enforcement personnel in all four divisions 鈥 State Parks, Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries, Marine Resources and State Lands.
鈥淚t was an honor to receive it. There are about 200 enforcement officers in the Conservation Department, and there is probably somebody out there that deserved it more than me, but I am grateful for the award.鈥
Director Greg Lein said 黑料天堂 State Parks is proud to have Mitchum considered for the ACEOA award.
鈥淲e think he鈥檚 a great recipient of the award,鈥 Lein said. 鈥淚 think the thing we鈥檙e most pleased with is the fact that he was nominated by his own people, which says a lot about the kind of leader he is. They respect him and respect his leadership to a degree that they wanted to nominate him. We鈥檙e proud to have him as a part of our team.鈥
Mitchum鈥檚 law enforcement career began in 1994 with a sheriff鈥檚 department in South Carolina, his wife鈥檚 home state. He worked patrol, K-9 and narcotics before being hired by the U.S. State Department in 2006 as a police advisor to advise and mentor the Afghanistan National Police.
鈥淭he whole concept was to teach an Islamic police force democratic policing,鈥 said Mitchum, who said he鈥檇 always wanted to be in law enforcement since Mobile Police Officer Dan Buck gave him a short ride in a squad car when he was 7 years old. 鈥淚t sounds challenging, and it was. I think we did a lot of good over there. I made a lot of longtime friends.鈥
After eight months at home, a friend called and asked him about being a bomb-detection dog handler back in Afghanistan. Mitchum only had experience with dual-purpose police dogs, not bomb dogs. After some convincing, he headed back overseas.
鈥淕ot my dog, and we were searching cars and buildings,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 had a really awesome dog (a Belgian Malinois named Brutus). He was a sharp, sharp dog. He received several recognitions while we were over there. It was all the dog. I was just holding the leash.
鈥淭he camp (near Kabul) got hit in 2015, and he developed a little PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder). Loud noises made him shut down. They retired him, and the general at that time was kind enough to fly him back to the states to be with me. That was pretty awesome.鈥