Video: Wash. PD Honors Fallen Officer with Memorial Dedication

July 6, 2022
Spokane Police Lt. Jon "JD" Anderson died in 2019 from complications of a decades-old injury he sustained while responding to a domestic violence call.

Jon "JD" Anderson was the type of person who loved to work, loved to volunteer and loved people, family, friends and former co-workers recalled of the late Spokane Police Department lieutenant during a memorial dedication Tuesday on the third anniversary of his death.

Anderson died at the age of 50 on July 5, 2019, due to complications from a decades-old injury. Although he died at home, his death was officially recognized as a "line of duty" death in December because of the injury.

He had been with the Spokane Police Department for 28 years. Anderson served in a number of roles with the department, but was perhaps best known for his work planning for major city events, such as Hoopfest and Bloomsday.

"Those who knew JD knew he was a force to be reckoned with," Spokane police Chief Craig Meidl said at the ceremony.

The son of former Spokane police Capt. Dave Anderson, he is survived by his wife, Michelle, and daughter, Jordyn Cranes.

It was an emotional ceremony for the family, who received a dedication marker for Anderson at the Spokane Police Academy on a warm, clear day.

Anderson was just as dedicated as a father as he was a police officer, Cranes said. "Every track meet, every cross-country meet," he was there, she said.

"I had dance shows. He wasn't that into that," she said with a laugh "but he'd still show up."

He was loud and funny, but also organized and always busy with something, Cranes said.

Cranes' father was the first person she went to when looking for advice on nearly anything.

"My dad was my person. Figuring out life without him here was so hard," she said.

His passing was made even more difficult because she didn't know how to navigate her grief without his advice.

"He was the person I wanted to talk to about it the most," she said. "I was hurting more than anything in my life."

Cranes is done mourning her father and instead wants to continue honoring him, she said.

Citing the National Institutes of Health, Meidl said police officers, on average, die about 22 years before members of the general public.

"When you look at the national statistics, law enforcement officers have higher statistics of anything negative," including divorce, depression and cancer, Meidl said. "This job can be a real grind."

Anderson's death was the result of a shoulder injury he sustained while in response to a domestic violence call in 1997. Anderson underwent five surgeries, but dealt with severe shoulder pain throughout his career, friends and family said. The injury created further medical complications that eventually led to his death .

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(c)2022 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.)

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