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It was like any other Monday, June 10, 2002, except I was recovering from upper back surgery 9 days earlier. My husband, Sal, left for work and would be out of town for three days. Then the telephone rang, and with that call, our world changed forever!
Our daughter-in-law called to tell us that our son, South Carolina Highway Patrol Senior Trooper Michael J. Rao, had been struck by a pickup truck on Interstate 95 while he was rendering aid to a family which had broken down on the side of the road.
After being airlifted to trauma hospital in Columbia, Mike has surgery to relieve the pressure in his head. Surgery was successful, but Mike took a turn for the worse. On June 12, 2002, Mike was removed from life support and was called to Heaven. Even then, Mike was an organ donor and lives on in several South Carolinians. We buried our second born child and only son on Father’s Day, June 16, 2002.
For the painful days, weeks, and months that followed, Sal and I were just numb and having difficulty carrying on without our son. There were some days that I did not know how we would get through the day and to the next day. We had support from our daughter and family members, but unless you have lost a child, no one really knows the emptiness or hollow feeling one experiences.
The months passed by and we attended several memorial ceremonies and Carolina C. O. P. S. events. All of these made us miss our son even more but at those events we learned of so many others who also lost a son or daughter in law enforcement. When we attended our first National Police Week in 2003, we made contact with many survivors, many of whom we count as friends today, some nineteen years after our loss.
Thanks to getting involved with our South Carolina C. O. P. S. chapter and serving as Treasurer for seven years and its President for four years, and Sal served as Vice President for four years, we were introduced to many new and “seasoned” survivors. These encounters helped us to grow “strong enough” to reach out to survivors and gain inner strength to help us heal. C. O. P. S. helped us to cope with our loss, carry on with life, but keep Mike alive within us each and every day!
We have attended every NPW since 2003. It took us a few years to attend the National C. O. P. S. Parents’ Retreat held annually in Arkansas but now wouldn’t miss another retreat for anything! Our son, Mike, brought us together with many survivors across the United States and into a world of which we knew nothing about until
C. O. P. S. came into our lives!
Lois and Sal Rao
Surviving Parents of Senior Trooper Michael J. Rao
South Carolina Highway Patrol
EOW 6/12/2002
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