Newton Police Memorial Association

Newton Police Memorial Association Established in 1938, the Newton Police Memorial Association benefits many charitable organizations with generous donations.

Come support NPD & NFD!
03/24/2026

Come support NPD & NFD!

Members of the NPD Honor Guard paying their respects to Ret Ofc Hay
03/18/2026

Members of the NPD Honor Guard paying their respects to Ret Ofc Hay

In Honor of Retired Newton Police Sgt. Walter B. Haywood.Walter died on March 3, 2026 at age 91 in Ft. Lauderdale FL.He ...
03/11/2026

In Honor of Retired Newton Police Sgt. Walter B. Haywood.

Walter died on March 3, 2026 at age 91 in Ft. Lauderdale FL.

He was appointed to the NPD in 1966, promoted in 1976 as the first black Sergeant on the department. He retired in 1988.

Walter was known as a great athlete and was well respected within the department and throughout the community.

We Have The Watch From Here Sir!

Our thoughts and prayers go out to the Uxbridge Police Department this morning for the tragic loss of one of their offic...
01/07/2026

Our thoughts and prayers go out to the Uxbridge Police Department this morning for the tragic loss of one of their officers.

Our hearts go out to our colleagues in Indian River county, Florida, for the tragic loss of of one of their officers.
11/22/2025

Our hearts go out to our colleagues in Indian River county, Florida, for the tragic loss of of one of their officers.

A Florida sheriff’s deputy identified as 47-year-old Terri Mashkow was killed while serving an eviction notice in Vero Beach, where officials say the suspected gunman opened fire and wounded another deputy and a locksmith before being shot multiple times himself.
https://wsvn.com/news/local/florida/florida-eviction-turns-deadly-as-a-deputy-is-killed-shooter-and-two-others-wounded/?FBWSVN

Congratulations to our newest Officer, Charles Morris, on his graduation from the Lynnfield Police Academy. Charles is s...
11/18/2025

Congratulations to our newest Officer, Charles Morris, on his graduation from the Lynnfield Police Academy. Charles is surrounded by (L-R retired Sergeant Frank Eldridge, Chief McMains, Superintendent Dowling and Captain Walsh. Welcome aboard Charles!

11/05/2024

The Malden Police Department regrets to announce the passing of Lieutenant Scott Carroll, a valued member of our administration and operations division, who died unexpectedly on November 3rd at the age of 56. A dedicated professional and respected leader, Scott served with integrity and pride, joining our ranks in 2000 after honorably serving in the US Marine Corps. He progressed through the ranks, becoming a sergeant in 2014, and lieutenant in 2023, contributing to our criminal investigation and special operations units. We appreciate the community's support during this difficult time and offer our deepest condolences to Scott's family and friends.

We will be updating this posting in the coming days with information regarding his services.

09/26/2024
🇺🇸 Never Forget 9/11 🇺🇸
09/11/2024

🇺🇸 Never Forget 9/11 🇺🇸

08/14/2024

Tribute to Deputy Police Chief George C. Labonte
07/01/1980 – 08/12/2024

Wrentham Deputy Police Chief George Labonte passed away yesterday after a long, very courageous battle with cancer. George leaves behind his loving wife Katie and their four children, Sadie, Benji, Jaxie and Julian. He also leaves his mom and dad, his sisters and his in-laws on Katie’s side of the family. Additionally, he left the rest of us, his police family, fire family, his friends, way too many to mention, but so many indeed. Finally, and thankfully, he left behind his cancer.

George was diagnosed with medullary thyroid cancer in 2016. He was a Police Lieutenant at the time and I the Deputy Chief. I remember well the day he came into the station and broke that terrible, stunning news. This form of cancer was rare and incurable he told us, making it even more scary. At the time, none of us heard of medullary thyroid cancer, but we heard plenty about it after that. “Check your neck!” he warned us, warned his friends, warned everyone. He would tell you that right now if he were here.

Scary as it was, in short time, George pushed “scary” aside and steadfastly proclaimed cancer would not rule his life. He would fight back of course, focused on diet, worked out like a crazy man, and participated in pharmaceutical trial studies, most notable a seemingly miracle drug called Loxo. He would also join support and research groups focused specifically on his type of cancer. In those groups, he was “known for his optimism, his upbeat personality”, said fellow survivor, Bill Nelson. “He brought hope to the group” added Bill who made it clear George was “his brother”.

So yes, George said over and over he would live as if he didn’t have cancer at all. We remember thinking what a brave thing for him to say and we truly admired him for saying it, but really? That can’t be done, no one can do that! Well, no one, maybe…except George.

Though he would have been completely justified to wallow in self-pity, seek attention for himself…he didn’t. Instead, he did what he said he would do. He didn’t allow cancer to dominate his life, but, dedicated a huge piece of his life to helping others with cancer, kids with cancer...pediatric cancer. Not surprising if you knew him.

So how does George, dealing with his own cancer, support kids with cancer? He could just donate some money, perhaps become a spokesman, start a page or something along those lines. Those would be easy, effective ways to show support, bring awareness and not require a lot of effort. George though, had other ideas. The cop with cancer, who by his own account wasn’t much of a long distance-runner, decided to…run a marathon for MGH (Mass General Hospital) to support finding a cure for pediatric cancer. George knew firsthand how scary it was for him to deal with cancer and imagined it had to be even worse for kids. The definition of selflessness. Go big or go home, I believe he said. And going big meant a marathon!

It really didn’t seem possible, that marathon idea, but he made it possible. He trained, ran on weekdays, long runs on Saturdays, ran alone, trained with friends and family. And then…he ran not one marathon, but two, maybe more, I lost track. He ran in Chicago and ran in Boston, he ran half marathons. Suddenly, the man with incurable cancer, seemed like the healthiest cop on Wrentham P.D., just living his life his way.

Of course, George had his struggles along this journey and that has to be said. He had pain, low moments, surgeries, treatments and all the rest of it. But he never lost hope and optimism. He harnessed the immeasurable love and support from Katie, the kids, his family and he forged ahead for as long as he could. He roared!

Now, his marathon is over. Not Boston or Chicago. This marathon began in 2016, the one he never asked for, never trained for, but nevertheless, ran hard and steady with the ferocity of a champion.

And yesterday, my friend, our friend, crossed the finish line.

God bless you George and God Bless your family. You are missed and loved by all of us at the Wrentham Police Department and beyond.

Appointed to Wrentham P.D. 2003
Promoted to Sergeant 2010
Promoted to Lieutenant 2012
Promoted to Deputy Police Chief 2018
FBI National Academy Session 282 2022

08/10/2024

Address

PO Box 650206
Boston, MA
02465

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