NYPD officer battling 9/11-related cancer promoted to detective via Skype

ByEyewitness News WABC logo
Thursday, January 30, 2020
NYPD officer battling 9/11-related cancer promoted to detective via Skype
Kemberly Richardson reports on the promotion of an NYPD officer battling 9/11-related cancer.

NEW YORK (WABC) -- An NYPD officer working from his Long Island home as he battles September 11th-related cancer was promoted to detective by Police Commissioner Dermot Shea via Skype Wednesday morning.

Officer Ross Dichter, weakened by surgeries and chemotherapy, is continuing to work from his Lynbrook home as a crime analyst for the NYPD's Office of Crime Strategies.

Shea said Dichter, a married father of three he described as a "crime analysis guru," is still able to crunch data and spot crime patterns as he works five hours a day from home.

During the Police Foundation's State of the NYPD breakfast, Shea asked Dichter, a self-described a numbers guy, if the numbers "7046" meant anything to him.

"I sat there and paused and started to sweat for a minute," he told Eyewitness News after the announcement. "I had to respond, 'I don't know what that number represent.'"

When he said no, Shea pulled out his new detective shield, with the number "7046."

The room of dignitaries at the Pierre Hotel erupted in applause.

"My name is Detective Ross Dichter," he said. "Over the moon. Very excited, shocked."

Despite the surgeries, the chemo, and even as the disease continues to take a heavy toll on his body, it's a labor of love for Dichter.

"It's something I love," he said. "I wasn't going to let this sickness have me stop."

A lot of thought also went into Dichter's shield number, that each digit reflects the year his wife, Karen, and three kids, Michael, Emma and Benjamin, were born."

"It's all about my kids and wife," he said "That's what keep me fighting."

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