Police briefs
A missing child was found within four hours of his disappearance early
Tuesday morning in the 19300 block of Seahorse Lane.
Officers from the Huntington Beach Police Department and the Orange
County Sheriff’s Department spotted 8-year-old Michael Lopes at about 3
a.m. Tuesday morning after he went to the wrong house and fell asleep on
the couch after spending a night with his family at Universal Studios.
The boy was not hurt.
Huntington Beach police Lt. Bruce Kelly said a neighbor brought Lopes
outside after seeing him sleeping on the couch.
Sgt. Joe Consoli said officers received the call at 11:08 p.m. Monday and were on scene in minutes when they were met by a “well-intentioned
neighbor who was mistaken [and] who informed police that the child had
been found.”
“Twenty minutes later the parents wondered where the officers were and
the officers went back to the scene realizing the child hadn’t been found
yet,” Kelly said.
Officers began a door-to-door search of the neighborhood with help
from an Orange County Sheriff’s helicopter and a bloodhound.
Consoli said about 20 officers were on scene when a neighbor walked
Michael outside at 2:53 a.m. Tuesday.
Kelly said the child was not from the neighborhood and was unfamiliar
with the houses.
Police academy seeking final volunteers
Want to become more involved in the community and get to know the
police department a little better?
On Sept. 5 the Huntington Beach Police Department will begin its new
Citizen Academy Class designed to educate residents about the workings of
the department, from investigations and patrol functions to SWAT, the K-9
Unit and the Narcotics/Vice Unit.
“Citizens don’t often know what the police department does so this is
an opportunity for people who live and work in the community to come
together and have more of a personal contact with the [police]
department,” said program coordinator Sgt. Gary Meza.
Meza said some activities will require participants to make
“split-second” decisions to use any necessary force.
Other activities include shooting handguns under supervision at the
shooting range, a heliport tour and working with a video-electronic
simulator to act out split-second decisions officers face.
The free class is open to anyone 18 and older who lives or works in
Huntington Beach. It meets 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays for 11 weeks.
Students will also be able to take a tour of the police facility and
have an opportunity to talk with Chief Ronald Lowenberg.
Meza said about five spots are open. To obtain an application, call
Meza at (714) 536-5650.
The program has graduated 450 participants since its inception in
1994.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.