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Family, friends mourn officer killed in yesterday's crash

Daniel Leach had thought about switching to another unit at the Metropolitan Police Department.

But that would mean he wouldn’t be able to be with his family as often.


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  • So for 25 years the corrections officer worked at the Laughlin Tucker Holding Facility, working early-morning shifts that allowed him to be home every night with his family — and with the kids he coached.

    Basketball, and coaching, was his passion.

    “It was like I wasn’t his only son,” Leach’s 19-year-old son, Christopher, said Sunday. “It was like he had 12 kids all the time.”

    Leach, 49, died Saturday morning in a crash along a stretch of U.S. Highway 95 near Searchlight. The Metropolitan Police Department lost its fourth officer this year, and a family lost a father.

    His family and friends gathered at his Boulder City home on Sunday to remember the family man, competitor, and occasional “ham.”

    “He was a wonderful, wonderful person,” said state Assemblyman Joe Hardy, R-Boulder City, who played team basketball with Leach for more than 15 years. “I treasure the moments I had with him.”

    His wife, Laura, said her husband was always up for anything. When his daughter, Alexandra, performed in the Boulder City Ballet Company’s production of “The Nutcracker” in 2002, he volunteered to don a top hat and cape and play the character Drosselmeyer, whose toys in the play come to life.

    “He wasn’t very graceful out there,” she laughed.

    Leach was born and raised in Willoughby, Ohio, where he met Laura. Their families were close friends, and Leach and Laura had known each other since childhood. After his family moved to Shreveport, La., the two began long-distance dating when they were 17.

    They moved to Boulder City in 1983 and were married in 1984.

    He had always been fond of children. Laura said he was almost like a “pied piper” for neighborhood children.

    “They’d knock on the door and say, 'Can Mr. Dan come out and play?’ ” she said.

    He was friendly with everybody, his family and friends said. He was known to pick up hitchhikers, drop them off at a nearby gas station and give them five dollars. Once, his wife walked into the room while he was on the phone with someone. From the sound of the conversation, she thought he was on the phone with a close friend. It was an AT&T call center worker.

    “The joke was, he’s never known a stranger,” she said.

    Leach, as he often did, was driving south in a Police Department van to pick up inmates at the jail in Laughlin and transport them to the Clark County Detention Center, when he died.

    The van collided with the back of a tractor trailer that was making a left turn onto northbound 95 about 5:45 a.m. His son said his father had just driven over a hill and probably couldn’t see the truck until the last second. His family said they were certain he was wearing his seat belt; he wouldn’t leave the driveway without putting it on.

    Leach coached at least 20 different teams — from basketball to T-ball — over the years. Several of the children he had coached, including his son, were on Boulder City High School’s state championship basketball team this year.

    Christopher, a freshman majoring in finance at the University of Nevada, Reno, said he had always entertained thoughts about going into law enforcement. His dad, however, had encouraged him to try something that promised better pay.

    “He just wanted it to be easier for me,” he said.

    But after his father’s death and after seeing how the department came together to help his family, he is going to seriously consider it.

    “To me, he was a champ,” Christopher said. “He was my hero.”
     

    Contact reporter Lawrence Mower at lmower@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0440.

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    The Stud wrote on November 23, 2009 02:33 AM: Forget about it Joey, I saw her first. I will help her spend the insurance money, not you!


    Joey wrote on November 23, 2009 02:03 AM: Wow, his wife is a hottie - what's her number??


    k.o wrote on November 23, 2009 12:47 AM: People join gangs to feel stronger. the police dept is no different. i stand alone. i answer to no one.


    brown wrote on November 23, 2009 12:35 AM: One would think cops could drive better.


    2nd grade wrote on November 23, 2009 12:26 AM: What is wrong with you people? You're practically daring someone to post something negative. You're as bad as they are with your taunts.


    Jane wrote on November 22, 2009 11:20 PM: I agree with P5356
    Keep your comments to yourself.
    I don't want to read your comments again. I am sick of you and your story.
    Write a book or something. But, we, the ENTIRE Clark Community are sick of hearing your story.

    I am sorry for the loss of this officer. May God bless he and his family.


    P5365 wrote on November 22, 2009 11:03 PM: Hi "Rude Metro Hater?" ...
    Good Idea, keep your comments
    to yourself and yourself ONLY.
    My heart goes out to Officer Leach
    and his wonderful family. He "will" be missed !!!


    Rude Metro Hater? wrote on November 22, 2009 10:38 PM: I am trying very hard to keep my comments to myself.


    C.O. Wife wrote on November 22, 2009 09:47 PM: Wow...this article brought tears to my eyes. I worked at CCDC before and say Officer Leach. Everytime I see him down the hall. He always have a smile on his face and never forget to say hi. Officer Leach loved his job and loved the protecting the citizen of Nevada. Our family will continue to pray for his souls and the family. And to all rude Metro hater, please keep your comment to yourself! RIP Officer Leach...you did your best to protect us and your family. We appreciate you and I'm sure the Metro family will miss your smiling face at CCDC.