
Groff Media 2024© Truth Endures IMDbPro
Presented by benandsteve.com By: Benjamin Groff II©
Officer Ben Groff had been juggling back-to-back court appearances at the Beckham County courthouse all morning. The docket was full of traffic violations and a few petty crimes, each case chewing away precious hours he would rather spend patrolling Elk City streets.

The courtroom’s musty air and the monotony of testimonies felt like a prison until his radio crackled to life with a voice that cut through the monotony like a razor.
“Priority call for Elk City PD. Possible domestic disturbance turned vehicle crash at Interstate 40 and State Highway 6. Ambulances en route. Officers needed to secure the scene. Witnesses report shots fired. Groff and Wheeler, you’re closest.”
Groff glanced at his fellow officer, Lieutenant Wheeler, seated across the room as a witness for a separate case. Wheeler’s eyes mirrored the same urgency. Without needing words, both men left the courthouse, striding quickly to their cruisers.
Moments later, Groff sped East on Interstate 40 toward the reported scene, the shrill wail of his siren slicing through the rural quiet. The chaos became evident as he neared the overpass where Interstate 40 crossed Old Highway 66.

A mangled pickup truck rested askew across the interstate median, its engine smoking and horn blaring. A crushed sedan lay twenty yards away, its front end obliterated. Skid marks and shattered glass littered the asphalt like jagged scars. Traffic had stopped, and several drivers had exited their vehicles to rubberneck or assist.
Groff slowed only enough to navigate the melee before parking behind Wheeler’s cruiser. As Groff exited his vehicle, he took in the scene—a woman, visibly distraught, sat against the guardrail, holding a bloodied handgun. Paramedics surrounded her, carefully taking the weapon from her trembling hands.
“Groff, over here!”
Wheeler shouted, pointing toward the pickup.
Inside, a man slumped lifelessly in the driver’s seat, a gunshot wound to his head. His hands still gripped the steering wheel, frozen in what seemed to be the final moment of his fatal decision. He had experienced the syndrome known in police work as having a Cadaveric Spasm or Instantaneous Rigor.
“She shot him, Ben,”
Wheeler said grimly.
“Witnesses say he tried to crash the truck into the underpass while she fought him off.”
Groff nodded, taking in Wheeler’s words while scanning for immediate threats.
“What caused the head-on with the sedan?”
“When she shot him, the truck swerved across the median into oncoming traffic,”
Wheeler explained.
“A family of three was in that car. Paramedics say they’re alive, but it’s bad.”
“He said we were both going to die!”
Groff approached the woman at the guardrail, her tear-streaked face contorted in anguish.
“Ma’am, I’m Officer Groff. I need you to tell me what happened.”
Through sobs, she explained the escalating argument at a gas station on Old Highway 66. Her husband, enraged over perceived slights, had driven recklessly onto the interstate, swerving wildly. When she tried to grab the wheel to prevent him from crashing into the underpass, he attacked her. In desperation, she retrieved the handgun from the glovebox and fired.
“He said we were both going to die!”
She whispered, her voice quaking.
“I didn’t want to hurt him, but I couldn’t let him kill us.”
Groff nodded solemnly, trying to balance empathy with the need for clarity.
“You did what you thought was necessary to survive. Right now, our focus is ensuring you’re safe and getting everyone the help they need.”
As he spoke, highway patrol officers arrived to assist with traffic control. Paramedics transported the injured family to the hospital, and the medical examiner began their grim work on the deceased husband.
Groff and Wheeler pieced together the scene as investigators. The domestic dispute was the tragic catalyst but also underscored the unpredictable volatility of police and emergency calls.
Hours later, Groff sat on the hood of his cruiser, staring at the fading sunlight over Interstate 40. Wheeler joined him, his expression weary.
“Another senseless tragedy,”
Wheeler said.
“Yeah,”
Groff replied, the day’s weight pressing down.
“But at least she survived.”
The call would haunt them both for a long time, a stark reminder of the thin line officers walk between preserving life and untangling the wreckage of human conflict. For Groff, it was just another chapter in a small-town officer’s unpredictable, often harrowing life.

I’m excited it would become a gripping thriller book. The scenes are suspenseful and electrifying. It’s movie-like. The story sounds interesting. Thanks for sharing, Benjamin.
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Thank you for your kind words. It was my life for over twenty five years.
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