Braun & Helmer Auction Service

January 25, 2007

Benefit dinner draws thousands

Filed under: Braun and Helmer News, Community News — David @ 1:51 pm

Benefit dinner draws thousands

Event raises money for local Marine injured while serving the country in Iraq

By Brian Cox, Staff Writer

PUBLISHED: January 25, 2007

There was a collective gasp of astonishment from the hundreds gathered in the large hall at the Washtenaw Farm Council Grounds Sunday afternoon when Marine Cpl. John Lockwood phoned from a military rehabilitation center in Florida and spoke to the crowd.

“I just want to say thank you to all of you,” Lockwood said in a clear, strong voice. “It’s wonderful how the community has come together to show support. I just want to say I love you all.”

Applause and cheers erupted.

More than 2,000 people turned out from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday for a benefit dinner and auction organized to raise money for Lockwood and his wife, Lisa. The 26-year-old Marine reservist, who was a Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Department deputy and once a part-time Saline police officer, was seriously injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq two months ago. He lost his left eye, broke his feet and legs, fractured his pelvis, and also broke his nose and thumb.

The benefit was organized by some of Lockwood’s fellow law enforcement officers and area veteran groups to help the couple financially during Lockwood’s long and difficult recovery process.

The response to the fund-raiser stunned its planners.

They figured to serve 1,000 spaghetti dinners over the course of six hours and raise additional money through an auction and raffle. But by 3:30 p.m., more than 1,800 dinner tickets already had been purchased and the steady stream of people arriving showed no sign of letting up.

“We can’t make enough trips to Meijer for more supplies,” said Saline Fire Chief Craig Hoeft. “We ran out of salad in two hours and had to get more.”

Volunteers had to bring in more tables to accommodate the turnout. Shortly after 5 p.m., the food was gone, only a few spaghetti strands were left clinging to the side of the pot.

At the front of the hall, where people purchased $10 dinner tickets and $5 raffles, volunteer Donna Willbanks, wearing a white “Operation Lockwood” T-shirt, said the flow never let up.

“It’s been amazing,” she said. “Lots of people buying a couple raffle tickets give $50 or $100 and say keep the change or just come in and give $100 and leave.”

Saline Police Sgt. Jay Basso, who helped organize the event, said one man purchased a dinner ticket with a $2,000 check.

“It’s been like that all day long,” he said. “This was not just a police or fire thing, it was a whole community thing.”

Many of those who came did not know Lockwood personally.

Brian Zoner, a member of the Wolverine Chapter of the motorcycle club The Leathernecks and a resident of Redford Township, said he heard about the event through an e-mail distributed by a club member.

“We keep our ears to the ground for any Marine Corps news,” he said.

The motorcycle club is made up of former Marines.

“Anything we can do to help a fellow Marine out, we do,” he said.

Zoner served in the Marine Corps from 1999 to 2003, including six months in Iraq. He came to the dinner with three club members. Zoner said it didn’t matter that none of them knew Lockwood personally.

“We all knew him; he’s a Marine,” Zoner said. “A Marine is a Marine.”

Jami Grigal is a detective with the Pittsfield Township Public Safety Department. She came to the dinner with her 2 1/2-year-old son, Nathan. She said news of what happened to Lockwood rippled throughout the law enforcement community.

“Whenever something like this happens, we try to reach out the best we can,” she said.

Savannah Butler, a student at Woodland Meadows, presented Lockwood’s family with a check for $2,498 raised by the students and parents of the school. Lockwood’s mother, Ruth Lockwood, is a retired Woodland Meadows teacher.

“We care about John a lot,” said the school’s principal, David Raft.

The auction began shortly after 4 p.m. Up for bid were items ranging from signed jerseys to a quilt made by Lisa Lockwood’s grandmother.

Ted Miller, 19, of Milan purchased a framed photograph signed by Al Kaline for $125. He said as soon as he saw the picture, he knew he had to have it. His mother, Lisa Miller, purchased a World Series baseball autographed by Detroit Tiger pitcher Nate Robertson.

Miller said he learned about the benefit from his aunt, who is a police officer in Milan, and his uncle, who is an officer in Ann Arbor.

Organizers had hoped to raise around $30,000 for the Lockwoods, but early estimates were that they had well exceeded their goal. Other fund-raisers are being planned, including possibly a golf outing.

“John and Lisa still have a long and difficult road ahead of them,” he said.

Benefit raises money for defibrillators - with video news report

Filed under: Braun and Helmer News, Community News — David @ 1:50 pm

Benefit raises money for defibrillators - with video news report
By Dan Meisler
DAILY PRESS & ARGUS

Country singer Michael Harding had a very personal reason for taking part in Tuesday night’s benefit concert to raise money for automated external defibrillators for Hamburg Township police.

Last time he was in the township, for last year’s Hamburg Fun Fest, he fell victim to a heart attack, and his life was most likely saved by a defibrillator used by a first responder.

Steve and Renee LaFave also have personal reasons. Their son, Michael, died in a 2005 boating accident, and they wanted a way to pay tribute to his memory. So they donated a defibrillator.

The LaFaves’ and Harding’s generosity, along with dozens of others who gathered at Zukey Lake Tavern for the benefit, raised about $8,000. That’s enough — along with defibrillators donated by Mike Mills of the Hamburg Pub and Chuck Plante and Rick Glazer of the Zukey Lake Tavern — to equip all seven of the township’s police cars and the police headquarters with defibrillators.

That’s more than Township Clerk Joanna Hardesty, one of the event’s organizers, expected to raise.

“I thought we would get enough for one unit,” she said.

The township’s Fire Department already has the defibrillators — which are used to shock a person’s heart back into normal rhythm — but the police cars didn’t, Hardesty said.

Harding drove from Indiana for the event, and had another show in the Indianapolis area the next day, but said he was glad to be able to be a part of the fundraiser.

“I figured, what better spokesman than me?” he said. “I’m very proud to be a part of this and have the opportunity to say ‘Thank you’ to the community.”

Steve LaFave said this was the perfect chance to pay tribute to his son.

“If it can save one person, it’s worth it,” he said.

The event also featured two auctions — one silent, and one conducted by professional auctioneer Brian Braun. Most of the items for sale were sports-related framed pictures or jerseys. Lonesome County, a bluegrass band, also played. The event was sponsored by the Hamburg Enhanced Recreation Organization, which puts on the Hamburg Fun Fest.

Although previous estimates had the price of a defibrillator at $3,000, Hardesty said going through a state purchasing pool lowered the cost to $1,300 each.

Contact Daily Press & Argus reporter Dan Meisler at (517) 552-2857 or dmeisler@gannett.com.

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