ROSWELL POLICE CHIEF RICHARD CAMPBELL

(Photo courtesy of Roswell Police Department and Chief
Richard Campbell)
When Chief Richard Campbell came to Roswell as its new city police chief in
1996, he said, he found the department had a lot of room for development and
growth. He feels he has brought about many needed changes in the ensuing 5 1/2
years that he has headed the department.
When he arrived, he said, he found serious problems within the community of
violent crime and gang activities. "People were afraid to leave their homes
after dark." Now, 5 1/2 years later, overall crime is down 36%. The first year
he was chief, the community had 11 homicides; last year, there were two. In
2001, all violent property crimes were down.
He said Roswell has become a healthier and safer place to live. Regardless,
it frustrates him that people still complain and criticize. He said he wished
those people would "look at the whole picture" and see the progress that has
been made.
"Never never compromise your ethics," he tells his officers.
He sets high standards for his department. "The men and women in this
department are professional," he said. "The officers are compassionate. The
community needs to appreciate them. Crime is down in Roswell because of those
law enforcement officers, because they care."
"We have been fortunate," he said. Thanks to "federal funds, this department
is well equipped and has received good training -- mental, physical, the
techniques and the tools -- necessary to successfully solve crimes." He also
credits the prosecutors with the district attorney's office with that
success.
Since he has been chief, he said the number of police shootings have been
reduced. He credits that to the tools, training, law enforcement classes and the
departments using alternatives to deadly force. Subsequently, lawsuits against
the department are down. Campbell's untiring efforts have brought to the Roswell
Police Department varied innovative alternatives to deadly force. Those have
been so successful that Campbell has offered to share their techniques with
other law enforcement agencies and city police departments.
Until perhaps 10 years ago, the only defensive weapons an officer had were
verbal, fists and handguns.
In-service training for officers includes options of using less-than-lethal
weapons. The bean-bag shotgun and 10% OC pepper spray are some examples of
less-than-lethal weapons.
Pepper-ball rifles, implemented last summer, are one of the newest types of
weapons in the RPD's arsenal. They can be fired from close range or as far away
as 35 feet. The subject is temporarily immobilized; the balls are painful when
they hit the victim, but cause no injury or illness requiring medical
attention.
The air-rifles shoot hard marble-like balls filled with 5% OC pepper
spray. The first reaction when shot is pain at the site of impact because
of the ball's velocity; as the victim recoils, he sucks in a deep breath of
pepper spray released into the air upon the ball's impact with his body. Where
it hits is a bruise that goes away in a day or two; the pepper spray causes only
temporary burning of the eyes, nose and skin. As an alternative if small
children, elderly people or those with respiratory problems are in the immediate
vicinity, the guns can also shoot inert or water-filled balls that release
nothing into the air.
Crisis Intervention Training teaches street officers appropriate responses
when dealing with violent people, including those with mental or emotional
problems or under the effects of drugs or alcohol. The training includes
knowledge of the law and a study of various types of psychological disorders and
effects of psychotherapeutic drugs.
The Jail Diversion Program addresses a complex issue that involves many
people and organizations. It involves the legal community, including District
Judge Alvin Jones and, initially, Judge Chip Johnson. It requires a considerable
amount of local support and a secure detox facility. The program provides
for a number of treatment options for those with emotional and psychological
disorders. It involves many community groups including legal professionals, care
givers and mental health facilities. Like Crisis Intervention, it is usually the
street officer who must first face and deal with the problem.
When situations makes it feasible, use of alternatives to deadly force are
the trend of the future.
The high standards Campbell sets for his officers, which in turn gives them
pride in their chief and department, and the innovative training, techniques and
tools he has introduced have created a more professional law enforcement
agency.
The police department constantly seeks recruits. The majority of the
"applicants are rejected because the department's standards -- academic,
physical and psychological -- are tough. The average person can't pass them,"
Campbell said. He believes the citizens most critical of the police could not
meet the standards RPD requires of its law enforcement officers.
Chief Campbell spent 21 years with the Albuquerque Police Department --
beginning with uniform patrol, then as under-cover narcotics, as a homicide
detective, with internal affairs, as area commander, and finally as deputy chief
of patrol responsible for 700 employees. He retired from APD in 1993. He brought
to the Roswell Police Department many years of law enforcement experience.
Both of his children, a son and a daughter, as well as a son-in-law are
uniform police officers in Albuquerque. Perhaps the highest compliment a man
could receive is having his children choose him as role-model when selecting
their own professions.
Rwm
(German Prisoners of War installing rockwork on the banks of
the North Spring River in Cahoon Park. The view is west from about a block east
of North Union. Photo courtesy of the Historical Society for Southeast New
Mexico, archive photo # 1094.)
ROSWELL PRISONER OF WAR CAMP
by Elvis Fleming
(The following was written by Fleming as a talk he will give when he
attends the annual conference of the Historical society of New Mexico in Las
Cruces in April. He is a panelist who will speak about German
prisoner-of-war-detainees during World War II, with emphasis on the farm work
they did in the Roswell area. Rwm)
One of the largest detention centers in the U.S. for war prisoners during
World War II was located between Roswell and Dexter. The name of the camp was
"Roswell Prisoner of War Internment Camp" and its address was a rural route out
of the Dexter Post Office. Local people usually called it "Orchard Park POW
Camp" because it was situated in a community by that name. The location met the
government's requirements regarding maximum security, being isolated from
sensitive military bases and industrial sites and separated from population
centers.
Private construction companies that subcontracted the electrical, pluming and
sewage systems built Camp Roswell, as officials and prisoners generally called
it, in 1942. The Corps of Engineers was responsible for building the security
fences and guarding the construction site.

(Sgt. Smith, left, and Sgt. Arthur M. Brosius standing in
front of the orderly room, holding the flag of the 340th Military Police guard
unit, which guarded Camp Roswell Prisoner of War Camp. Photo courtesy of
Historical Society for Southeastern New Mexico, photo # 1101-B)
The late Arthur Brosius, a Provost Sergeant with the 340th Military Police
Escort Corps, was involved in getting the base operational, starting September
5, 1942. I interviewed Mr. Brosius about 25 years ago. Probably the definitive
source on the history of the New Mexico camps is an article by Jake Spidle in
the New Mexico Historical Review of April 1974. I have also interviewed Hans
Rudolph Poethig of Roswell several times; he was one of the prisoners at Orchard
Park. Other Roswell historians, such as Georgia B. Redfield and Ernestine
Chesser Williams, have written on this subject.
Some 19 companies of guards were brought in to escort the prisoners in and
out of camp. Brosius was at the camp the entire time it was in operation; he
later was a well-known security chief at New Mexico Military Institute for many
years.
The first 250 prisoners arrived on November 26, 1942; they were some of
Rommel's 8th Army Afrikakorps. The men got off the train about a mile-and-a-half
from the camp and marched down the middle of the road to the camp under the
watchful eyes of 35 guards with shotguns. These elite soldiers may have been
Nazis; at least they were patriotic Germans who never lost their pride or
bearing -- a quality that was much admired by the American soldiers who guarded
them. The number of prisoners at Camp Roswell reached 350 by the end of
1942.
Between July 15 and August 15, 1943, another 4,000 Germans arrived. Although
there were many transfers and changes, the camp was pretty much filled to
capacity after that until after the war ended. In the late summer of 1944, new
prisoners arriving were old men and boys who had been captured in the campaign
that started in Normandy on D-Day.
The 120-acre camp consisted of frame barracks buildings to house 4,800
prisoners in three compounds of 1,600 each. Four American physicians, two
dentists, seven nurses and an optician staffed the modern, 250-bed hospital.
Many prisoners assisted them. A large recreation area next to the compounds was
used for exercise, tennis and especially soccer.
Two high fences enclosed the camp with barbed wire at the top. The fences
were 15 feet apart, and there were about a dozen guard towers around the
perimeter.
The buildings at Camp Roswell are said to have been solidly built and
comfortable. The prisoners used native plants and rocks found on the scene to
landscape and beautify the place. The camp strictly observed all of the terms of
the Geneva Convention and received compliments from several international
inspection agencies.
The prisoners made the best of their situation. Besides sports and games,
many were active in various dramatic and musical shows. Camp Roswell always had
an orchestra -- sometimes two or three. They played everything from Mozart to
"Pistol-Packin' Mama." Protestant church services -- mainly Lutheran - and
Catholic services were offered.
A large percentage of the prisoners enrolled in college-level courses taught
by their own teachers or by correspondence from several universities. According
to Art Brosius, the Germans, especially Rommel's men, were always studying
something. They had a library, and they published their own newspapers. Many of
the prisoners were quite active in various arts and crafts projects and
exhibits. One of the crafts they engaged in, according to Rudy Poethig, was
making schnapps from oranges, orange juice and sugar they squirreled away. They
had it hidden under the barracks floor in one-gallon pickle jars.
Few tried to escape, and none were very successful. At one point, guards
discovered a tunnel; they filled it in with rocks and caved it in. A rancher
near Artesia killed one escapee. The others were recaptured.
The original policy was simply to keep the prisoners in the camps. This
policy was changed in 1943 because of severe labor shortage, especially in
agriculture. Some prisoners were used by the military for roadwork and
maintenance work.
(German Iron Cross emblem now a historical site in Roswell.
Photo courtesy of the Historical Society for Southeast New Mexico,
archives.)
One notable project in Roswell was placing rocks along the banks
("rip-rapping") of North Spring River in Cahoon Park and elsewhere near downtown
Roswell for erosion control. The prisoners used different colors of rocks to
build a German Iron Cross emblem into the bank of the river. Local residents
were upset about this, so that night they dumped a truckload of concrete on top
of it. It remained hidden and was lost from memory for about 40 years. It is now
recognized as an historical site in Roswell as part of the POW-MIA Park at
Pennsylvania and West Ninth Street.
Farming out the prisoners to government entities seemed to work
well, so a new policy was passed providing that prisoners could work as contract
labor for private employers. On June 26, 1943, the Army announced that New
Mexico POWs would be available for work on farms or elsewhere. Over 500 German
prisoners were at work on farms in the Pecos Valley by the end of July.
Other areas wanted to use prisoners, too, so side-camps were
established virtually all over the state. Camp Roswell had branches on the Hal
Bogle farm in nearby Dexter, at Tweedy Farms, also close by, and in Artesia,
Mayhill, Carlsbad, Portales, Clovis and elsewhere. The camps were usually small,
such as the Bogle Farms camp with a capacity of 30 to 60 men. Other side-camps
could handle up to 400.
Local farmers who lived close to the camp came early every morning
with their trucks to pick up the Germans for farm work. Most of the agricultural
work done by Camp Roswell prisoners was in the cotton patches. They did not
particularly like this kind of work and were not as productive as local
experienced children or women. Carl Clardy and Russell Smith, who uses as many
as 250 prisoners around Roswell, stated that the Germans' work was not
satisfactory, but was "a whole lot better than nothing." Spidle concludes that
the Germans allowed they should not appear too eager to help the enemy, lest
they incur the wrath of their own people and government after the war.
Originally, farmers had to pay the prisoners the going wage for farm work, but
they prevailed upon the government to allow a lower rate because of their
limited productivity. According to Brosius, the pay amounted to about 80 cents a
day.
Rudy Poethig, who worked as a linguist and dental assistant,
decided he wanted to get out of camp so he asked for the job of cotton weigher.
He soon discovered his mistake; he had to weigh the sacks of cotton picked by up
to 60 men and empty the sacks into the trailer as many as two and three times a
day.
Birdie Dee Eccles had to run her family farm at East Grand Plains,
southeast of Roswell, while her husband worked as a highway engineer. Floyd
Wagner, her farm tenant, had prisoners to do field work, and Mrs. Eccles had
them to repair fences and buildings, do household work and perform other
chores.
At the time of her experience with the prisoners, they brought raw
ham and a chunk of bread for lunch. Presumably this was in the summer and fall
of 1945 after V-E Day during the so-called "revenge" program of Eleanor
Roosevelt, who maintained that the prisoners in America were treated too well.
They were placed on a diet of 800 calories a day. Farmers realized that the
Germans could not do farm labor on that diet, so they began to supplement their
food supply while protesting to the Army about the short rations.
Each day, Mrs. Eccles collected the ham from the Germans on her
farm and cooked it in a pressure cooker, then added onions, carrots and cabbage.
One of the men was sent to the truck farm for fresh tomatoes and cucumbers. Mrs.
Eccles put the food in a big bowl and gave each man a tin cup and spoon. They
liked to pick out the chunks of food with their fingers, and then dip their
bread in the broth. sometimes a watermelon would be cut up for the men, which
was also enjoyed by the guard, Sgt. Brosius.
Like many others who employed prisoners, Mrs. Eccles got to know
many of them quite well. They asked her a lot of questions about the USA and the
Constitution. She gave them little books with the Constitution and the
Gettysburg Address. They were curious about the right to keep and bear arms,
separation of church and state, Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War over
slavery.
Herbert Kohler, a German from Leipzig, worked in Mrs. Eccles'
house. Brosium told her it was all right as long as she did not get caught. When
inspectors were coming in, Brosius would alert her, giving Kohler time to grab a
hoe and run out into the garden and start chopping weeds.
According to Mrs. Eccles, a neighbor woman turned her in for
coddling the prisoners. The FBI came to investigate. They told her she shouldn't
cook the ham for the prisoners, but they commended her for teaching them about
America. They told the neighbor to get three other neighbors to sign the
complaint and then contact them. That was the end of that.
Besides the truck garden and cotton patch, the prisoners on the
Eccles farm worked in the fields of corn and alfalfa.
On one occasion, armed farmers began to congregate -- which scared
the wits out of the Germans. But it was only the start of a deer hunt in the
mountains. Fred Nelson, who was another prominent farmer in the area, brought
back a bear from the hunt. He cooked it over an open fire for the Germans at
Thanksgiving. Mrs. Eccles said the prisoners liked the greasy bear meat, and she
had an opportunity to teach them about Thanksgiving.
At one point, Italian prisoners were sent to replace the Germans.
Mrs. Eccles aid, "They didn't seem to know what to do about anything, and we had
to give them up." Farmers asked the Army not to bring any more Italians.
No more prisoners were brought to the U.S. after V-E Day. Art
Brosius claimed that during the final months of Camp Roswell, some details of
prisoners were allowed to go out to work on farms without guards. The prisoners
knew the war was over and they would soon be going home, so they had no desire
to escape or otherwise make trouble.
All of the side-camps were closed by the end of February 1946, and
the main camp soon after. The Germans were taken to France and turned over to
the French soldiers. Rudy Poethig says the French soldiers stole everything the
Germans had.
Mrs. Eccles, Fred Nelson and several others kept up with some of
the German prisoners after the war. There were visits both in New Mexico and
Europe between the former POWs and their American employers. A few of the men of
Camp Roswell came back to live in the area, most notably Rudy Poethig.
Most of the buildings were moved to Roswell Army Air Field and
Eastern New Mexico University in Portales. Some were used for other purposes; at
least two of the former POW barracks are still in use as residences in Roswell.
The foundations of the camp buildings were destroyed about 1975, but the sewage
treatment plant still stands.
In recent years, several pilgrimages of former prisoners and/or
their descendants have come from Germany to visit the site. They are usually
visibly moved by the experience but even more by the friendliness of the Roswell
people who welcome them with open arms and show them a good time.
Top
FACING THE WIND
by Vic Reeves
In 1935 when I was 13, I was boarding with a family friend, Beulah
Tabor ("Aunt Beulah") in El Paso. I was there to go through the final year of
grade school and try to get up to speed for the Texas school system. I would be
starting high school there next fall.
My folks were paying for my board, of course, but I had some
little expenses for which I needed extra money. I got myself an afternoon paper
route and that made it necessary for me to have a bike. Dad "loaned" me the
money to buy a nice used one I had located.
Everything went well through the first semester. I was "acing" my
classes, which proved that our little one-room school in New Mexico was not so
far behind the Texas schools as we had been told -- by Texans. In fact, it was
not behind at all; it was ahead!
I had an ideal set-up there with Aunt Beulah, who was an excellent
cook and fed me very well. She also sometimes let me drive her brand-new
Plymouth.
But along in the spring, I was getting pretty homesick. Our ranch
was only 25 miles away and that sounded closer and closer as the weeks wore on
and my spring fever got worse and worse. One afternoon I couldn't stand it any
longer. I quit my paper route with no notice -- which guaranteed I couldn't get
it back -- and started out on Highway 54 toward Newman and home.
There was a medium-to-fierce sandstorm blowing from the southwest
and the road ran straight north. This gave me a slight tailwind but a very
strong side-wind. I had to lean as far to the left as I could to keep from being
blown off the right edge of the road. I thought, "Oh boy, I'm glad I won't have
to ride back on this road, facing the wind."
Even five miles under those conditions, with sand in my eyes, nose
and mouth and down my collar, would have been pretty tough. But 25 miles was
almost more than I could make. Many times I thought I would not make it. But the
thought of Mom's welcoming arms and a cold glass of milk and some cookies
spurred me on.
At long last, with the (imagined) last ounce of my strength, I
turned off the highway to ride the half-mile to the ranch. Now I was facing the
wind at about 11 o'clock. I had to get off the bike and push it. The delicious
thoughts of what lay ahead kept me going.
When I got to Mom's kitchen door, I didn't just barge in as I
normally would have done. I even knocked. And knocked. She was sure slow getting
there! When she finally did open the door, I could see right away that she was
surprised, but not pleased, to see me. No smile. No open arms.
She looked me over and said, "Well, aren't you a sorry looking
thing!" and stood aside so I could enter. I got myself a glass of water. Mom
said, "Well, now young man, what's this all about?"
I was not going to cry. I WAS NOT. But I blubbered a little. "I
just got homesick, Mom. I couldn't stand it anymore. Aren't you even glad to see
me?"
"Yes, of course I'm glad to see you, but I don't understand how
you can be here at this time of day. What about your paper route? And what did
you tell Aunt Beulah? I don't think I'm going to like what you tell me, but try
telling me anyway."
So I did. I said I had quit my paper route. No, I hadn't given any
notice. Yes, the district manager was mad. He said, "Don't come around here
wanting your route back, because you don't have a route here." Gosh, I hadn't
even thought about Aunt Beulah.
"You didn't think about her. No, it seems you didn't think about
anybody but yourself. What do you suppose she's thinking right now? Isn't this
about the time she gets home from work and you get home from your route?"
"Yes'm." My head was hanging and I was crying.
"I didn't understand what you said," she told me. I could hear
her!
"She's going to be frantic, Son. She won't have any idea what
could have happened to you. You know we don't have telephones out here. We can't
call her to let her know that you're at least all right. She can't call us to
see if we know anything about you. Somebody has to go and tell somebody. Now, go
wash your face, go find your goggles and a cap, and I'll fix you a glass of milk
and a cookie or two. As soon as you finish, you're going to get on that bike and
head back to El Paso."
"FACING THE WIND?"
"Facing the wind. You should have thought of that before you
started out."
I couldn't believe what I was hearing, but the stern look on
Mother's face told me it was real. I made my cookies and milk last as long as I
could, but I was hungry so that was not very long.
I reluctantly put on my skin-tight goggles (which would at least
keep the sand out of my eyes), my aviator cap and jacket, and headed out the
door.
Mom gave me a little pat but no hug, and said, "We'll talk about
this again. I'm sure your father will have something to say to you. We'll
probably see you this weekend. Now, you'd better get going."
And she shut the door!
I had new strength from the cookies and milk and I was mad, hurt
and scared. So the first mile or so went pretty well. I was throwing all my
weight on each pedal as I pushed it down. Now I had to lean hard to the
right.
I was going to have to keep right after it if I was going to get
back to El Paso and Aunt Beulah's before dark. And what was I going to say to
her? Would she be mad like Mom? Or would she be just so relieved that she'd
forget to scold me? I knew I had really messed up my whole world. I had
definitely hurt some of the people I cared about most. Wow.
About five miles down the road, a familiar sound came up beside
me. It was Dad's pickup. He and Mom had come to give me more heck, I figured.
But that wasn't it. They stopped. Dad got out, came back and said, "Hi. Want a
lift?" Whooboy, did I.
We put the bike in the back and I got in between my mom and my dad
and I realized the world had not ended after all. Nothing was said all the way
back to Aunt Beulah's house. My parents went in with me and we found an almost
hysterical woman. She was so glad to see me that she didn't even seem mad. (I
was the Prodigal Son, I guess.)
I had learned a valuable lesson about responsibility and maturity.
I didn't need a lecture.
****
(The setting of Vic's memoir essay was the infamous Dust Bowl
Days when large parts of Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico were devastated by
storms of blowing dirt and sand. Such conditions would "make or break" men's
spirits. Those who lived through times such as those were resilient. Their
strengths of character are the foundations on which today's communities were
built. Rwm)