Public Safety

Deputy sheriff helps get the AC working

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Windsor County Sheriff Ryan Patrick Palmer shared this photoshopped illo of Deputy Michael Keefe, identifying the anonymous artist as RPP’

By VDC Staff

A routine welfare check turned into a lifesaving gesture Tuesday when Windsor County Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Keefe went above and beyond to help an elderly resident trapped in dangerously hot conditions, Sheriff Ryan Palmer said on the WCSD Facebook page. 

Keefe was dispatched to a Weathersfield home after neighbors reported they hadn’t seen or heard from the elderly occupant in several days. Upon arrival, he found the individual safe but sitting in stifling indoor heat.

“The person was okay physically, but the house was unbearably hot,” Keefe said. “They told me they couldn’t figure out how to use their mini split air conditioning system, and it had been that way for a while.”

Rather than leave after confirming the resident’s well-being, Keefe stayed and worked with them to get the AC units running correctly.

“I didn’t want to just walk away knowing how uncomfortable—and potentially dangerous—that heat could be,” Keefe said. “It only took a little extra time, but I could feel the temperature already dropping before I left.”

Sheriff Palmer praised Keefe’s actions, calling them a prime example of the department’s mission in action.

“This is what community policing looks like,” Palmer said. “Deputy Keefe didn’t just respond to a call—he showed real care for someone who needed help in a way that no policy manual can teach. We’re proud of him.”

The moment was also immortalized in an unexpected way—through an artistic rendering of the scene, shared anonymously by a local illustrator who signs their work simply as RPP.

Sheriff Ryan Patrick Palmer – perhaps somewhat tongue in cheek – expressed appreciation for the artistic tribute: “Whoever RPP is, we want to thank them. Their work captures the heart behind what Deputy Keefe did. It’s a reminder that acts of service can inspire creativity and connection in our community.”


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Categories: Public Safety

4 replies »

  1. Hope the council doesn’t get wind of this humanitarian gesture, they will most likely trim the sheriff’s budget in order to get rid of the deputy.

  2. And this will never see the light of day in Vermont mainstream press.

    This is called loving your neighbor, it’s not police work.

    Police work is about police work. Hope he doesn’t sing any rap songs, he’ll have to say goodbye to a great career.

    Meanwhile…….

    Our hospitals and doctors don’t even have patients visit their office, they call them on the phone to do a physical. No blood test. No blood pressure test. Just a phone call.

    We have things abit upside down in our lovely state.

  3. Wonderful person doing good. How about more doing good by neighbors? Or is that now the responsibility of someone else, of only the police or the government. People, restore your humanity and start looking after each other.