10:15 PM CDT on Monday, June 30, 2008
By Jeff McShan / 11 News
HOUSTON -- From his hospital bed, Houston police officer Joe Pyland spent much of Monday answering phone calls and welcoming visitors.
The outpouring of support is helping him cope with his injuries and dealing with the overwhelming loss of his friend Officer Gary Gryder.
Pyland and Gryder were working traffic control along a Katy Freeway feeder road on Sunday when a driver smashed through some road barricades and struck the officers. Gryder was killed and Pyland was seriously injured.
“I lost a friend, you lost a friend. We lost a great police officer,” Pyland said in an exclusive interview with 11 News. “I’m guessing another two or three inches and I am probably gone also.”
Investigators said it is unclear if the driver of the car, Hung Truong, even saw the barricades or the flashing lights on the police car before the collision. Police said preliminary toxicology reports show that no alcohol or drugs were found in his system.
Still, he has been charged with manslaughter. Harris County court records also revealed that Truong is an illegal immigrant.
“You know, a car coming 70 miles-per-hour, a couple of barricades are not going to do nothing. Plus my overhead lights on the vehicle were on,” said Pyland. “I was on the ground. I had been struck and Gary had been knocked a distance from the vehicle.
“Just from experience, I know that is not good.”
It wasn’t.
Families for both officers waited anxiously in the emergency room as doctors and nurses worked to save their lives. Pyland’s wife Mary was not far from Gryder’s family when they received the devastating news.
“When we were in the ER trauma room, my husband was in one room. There’s a nurses station and there was the other family saying goodbye,” she said. “I was telling my family it could have been reversed. And we feel so lucky.”
Just a day after the incident, Pyland was vowing to return to the streets. However, not before his broken leg and heavy heart heal first.
“A police officer is conditioned to go back to work. This isn’t the first tragic situation,” said Pyland. “You know you get back on the saddle and get back to it.”
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