Minneapolis Police Chief Tim Dolan handed out an array of awards to law enforcement officers and citizens on Wednesday for their heroism, professionalism and contributions to the public good.
He cited investigators whose work brought down a major gang, officers who talked suicidal people off of bridges, a local doctor who gave CPR to save someone's life and a citizen in northeast Minneapolis who helped subdue a suspect who was fighting a police officer.
The quarterly awards ceremony recognized more than 100 people, including 82 Minneapolis police officers.
Among the most dramatic incidents involved John Sundahl, 31, who was fixing dinner at his home on the 2600 block of Polk St. NE, when a suspect, pursued by a police officer, ran by the house last June. Sundahl heard the officer order the man to the ground and saw the officer deploy her Taser.
Dolan said the Sundahl saw the suspect "violently rip the wires from the probes" of the Taser. The suspect weighed about 100 pounds more than the officer. Sundahl came outside, put the suspect in a neck restraint and took him to the ground and "calmly told the suspect to relax," Dolan said. "The suspect was so large he required three sets of handcuffs to link his arms."
"Mr. Sundahl went above and beyond what most citizens would consider doing to prevent this officer from being injured or even killed," said Dolan, in awarding him a "Citizen's Award of Valor."
Sundahl, a lead technician for Comcast and former bouncer, shrugged off the award. "I think anyone would have done it," he said after the ceremony.
Police asked the media not to photograph several of the officers because of their undercover assignments and deleted their names from a summary provided the media.
Among the others who were cited: