There likely arenāt many who are familiar with the name Jayson Bagsby. You might know former White House adviser Boris Epshteyn and former Missouri GOP Gov. Eric Greitens, though ā and both of them introduced the world to Bagsby on their Twitter accounts this week.
Itās probably worth starting at the beginning of Bagsbyās story, however, and covering the tragedy that drove him to make a serious change in his life.
The headline from KTVI-TV in July of last year says it all: āDouble Murder in Midtown part of violent Crime spike in St. Louis.ā One of the two victims, 20-year-old Arie Bagsby, was Jaysonās brother.
It could have been just another statistic from the annus horribilis of 2020, where there seemed to be a spike in murders found in every major city. St. Louis was no different. āThere seems to be a whole lot more shorter fuses than usual,ā St. Louis Metropolitan Police Chief John Hayden said.
The Shooting got a bit more coverage than usual, however, because of Greitensā involvement. The former governor, an ex-Navy SEAL who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, was having dinner with a friend nearby when he heard the shots ring out. Both he and his friend ran to the scene.
āMy buddy started CPR immediately on the first victim,ā said Greitens, who performed a tourniquet on the other victim.
āWhat is so disturbing is this is what you would expect in Iraq and Afghanistan,ā Greitens said. āYou expect automatic, semi-automatic gunfire going off at night.ā
Greitensā involvement, however, didnāt end there. In an August KTVI-TV report, he talked about how he comforted the Bagsby family after their loss.
āThe brother of one of the victims reached out to me and he asked me if I would be willing to come down and talk with him and particularly to talk to his mom and they just wanted to know what those final moments were like for her son,ā Greitens said.
āIt actually meant a lot, because he didnāt have to come and talk,ā Jayson Bagsby told KTVI.
The night had a profound impact on Bagsby. While he had been a firefighter EMT for five years, he decided to take a more active role serving his community ā and a deeply unpopular one in the summer of 2020. He decided to become a police officer.
āOver the years with EMS, Iāve learned how to cope with things and just keep going you canāt really let it slow you down,ā he said.
āI like helping people, meeting people, hearing their stories and seeing what I can do to make their situations better. I try to not let what other people think sway my opinion because there have been several people who have been like ā oh you shouldnāt become a cop because this that or the other.ā
He also noted that he would keep Arieās spirit alive. His brother, Jayson said, had a knack for ingenuity, ālike fixing a printer for somebody.ā
āHe doesnāt know how, but heāll figure it out,ā Jayson said. He told KTVI he wanted to apply that thinking into fixing St. Louisā streets ā and he said he was starting Police academy in September.
This week, KTVI-TV reported he was now a Police officer working the overnight shift in the cityās North Patrol Division.
Thatās the same area he served as an EMT firefighter.
āIt was actually super exciting when I saw it, since you have six different districts,ā he said.
āYou can go anywhere from South to Central to North, and when I saw that I was like, āYes!āā
It turns out the silent majority still support our Police, too; Bagsby noted that after the stationās August 2020 report on his decision to become an officer, the positive feedback pleasantly surprised him,
āI was like, hmm, a lot of people do support it,ā Bagsby said.
Heās been on the job for three weeks now, and he said heād like to help āalleviate some of the problems that are out there and ongoing and try to stop those problems before they get even worse and out of hand.ā
On Friday, Greitens and Epshteyn made sure Bagsbyās story wasnāt just something viewers in the St. Louis area were familiar with.
Calling Bagsbyās journey āa tremendous story about where peopleās hearts are at in terms of supporting the Policeā and āabout how people can deal with tremendous injustice and pain and hardship and continue to live purposeful lives and to serve,ā Greitens noted that Bagsby was āputting his own life on the lineā to serve the people of his city.
And, as Epshteyn said in his retweet, it was a āMUST WATCH.ā These are the heroes we need to hear about right now.
Heāll need that ingenuity. As The Associated Press reported in January, St. Louisā murder rate in 2020 was the highest it has been in 50 years.
St. Louis is also dealing with a new mayor, Tishuara Jones, who wants to defund the police.
But as Bagsbyās story proves, even in the darkest tunnel, thereās light at the end of it.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
