Prime Ops

Prime Ops Our company is a family owned business in Tacoma, Washington. We have a desire to create more jobs f

09/11/2025

05/27/2025
Happy Veteran's Day!
11/11/2024

Happy Veteran's Day!

So Sad. Only 8 months on the job.Line of Duty Death - Dallas PDRIP Officer Darron Burks
08/30/2024

So Sad. Only 8 months on the job.

Line of Duty Death - Dallas PD

RIP Officer Darron Burks

Our hearts go out to the Gadd family, the Washington State Patrol , and the entire WA law enforcement community during t...
03/03/2024

Our hearts go out to the Gadd family, the Washington State Patrol , and the entire WA law enforcement community during this time of grief and mourning. Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers. Rest in peace, Trooper Gadd.

Our Washington State Patrol trooper tragically lost in the line of duty this morning has been identified as Trooper Christopher M. Gadd, a 27-year-old dedicated father, husband, son, brother, and friend. His name was announced during a 1:30 p.m. press conference held in Marysville, which can be viewed here: https://youtube.com/live/-ZRiKbr8acs

Trooper Gadd was killed early this morning after being struck by a motorist on southbound Interstate 5 near 136th Street North in Marysville. He served two-and-a-half years with the WSP.

Trooper Gadd, 27, is survived by his wife, Cammryn, daughter Kaelyn, father WSP Trooper David Gadd, mother Gillian, sister, Jacqueline who currently serves as a trooper with the Texas Department of Public Safety, and many other family members, friends and colleagues.

Trooper Gadd is the 33rd member of the WSP to die in the line of duty in the agency’s 103 years of service to this state.

Trooper Gadd was born on Sept. 28, 1996, in Pasco, Wash. He graduated from Kentlake High School in Kent, Wash., before attending Green River College and Tacoma Community College, earning his Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT) certification. Trooper Gadd married his wife Cammryn in 2020. The couple welcomed their daughter, Kaelyn, two years later.

This promising young man began working for the WSP on Sept. 16, 2021, as a trooper cadet assigned to Grandview. He joined the 116th Trooper Basic Training Class (TBTC) on April 18, 2022. He successfully graduated later that year on Nov. 16 and was assigned to serve in Marysville.

While at the academy, Trooper Gadd received the Top Academic Award that recognizes the outstanding efforts of the cadet who attains the highest grade point average compiled in the more than 30 exams necessary for graduation.

“Chris’s passing is a devastating loss to his family – a family who knows all too well the risks of public service but still has offered that service with unquestioned valor and now, unfathomable sacrifice,” said WSP Chief John R. Batiste. “I can tell you that across the entire Washington State Patrol, every head is bowed, every knee is bent, and every heart is broken as we mourn this loss. To honor Chris, even in sorrow, we will go on. We will continue to serve. Because he did, we must.”

The WSP appreciates both the media and public’s honoring of the family’s privacy at this time. After consultation with the family, the WSP will make information available in the days to come on service and memorial planning.

We will never forget Trooper Christopher M. Gadd #927

Thank a service member. They are choosing to protect you and your family so you can be at peace over the holidays.      ...
12/24/2023

Thank a service member. They are choosing to protect you and your family so you can be at peace over the holidays.

I remember this day like it was yesterday. I was at the Ambulance Station in Lacey, WA with my crew. We gathered around ...
09/11/2023

I remember this day like it was yesterday.

I was at the Ambulance Station in Lacey, WA with my crew. We gathered around the TV in disbelief. We were all Firefighters so we knew exactly what had occurred when the first tower fell - "There are a lot of firefighters heading up those stairs".

Years later, most of us continued to participate in firefighter stair climb competitions and charities in remembrance of those fallen firefighters. I recall climbing up 69 flights in just my bunker gear (fire coat, pants, boots) and air pack "without" extra equipment (hose, tools, etc.) and the stress of hundreds of scared people coming down at you, not to mention the unknown up top.

I feel for the families that lost their loved ones that day. I visited 9/11 last year on a business trip and witnessed many widowed wives sitting next to the hole crying still in utter shock. We sometimes forget those people who still have so much pain and confusion, it's very sad. I sat down with an older grieving woman that said, "he filled in for another worker that day and never came home". She was so broken even after two decades, poor lady. She said she has walked down and visited the site every day since 9/11 hoping she would find him.

Today, remember ALL of those who made the ultimate sacrifice...and all those still suffering. We stand by you.

Luke

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