Sgt. Curtis Massey Was 41
by Orson BeanFrom the Los Angeles Times, Thursday January 29th, 2009:
2 DIE IN HEAD-ON COLLISION
A Culver City police officer and a Van Nuys man were killed Wednesday in a head-on collision that closed several lanes of the 10 freeway for hours during the morning commute.
Sgt. Curtis Massey, 41, was driving east on his way to work when he was struck about 5 a.m. just west of National Boulevard by a silver Toyota Camry traveling the wrong way, said Officer Miguel Luevano of the California Highway Patrol. Massey’s unmarked police car, a four-door Dodge Charger, was engulfed in flames.
No one else was hurt and the CHP is investigating. Pete Demetriou, a radio reporter for KFWB-AM (980) was driving to work around 4:55 a.m. on the eastbound 10, when he saw a car, driven by the Van Nuys man, coming toward him.
“You’re used to seeing headlights coming at you, but you assume they’re on the other side,” he said. “At about 200 yards I realized he was coming in my lane.” Demetroiu said he called police after the car passed him traveling about 65 mph. All eastbound lanes and two westbound lanes of the 10 were closed at the 405 freeway until about 1 p.m.
Massey, who is survived by a wife and three young children, was a 17-year veteran of the police department and was most recently assigned to the juvenile detective bureau.
Police Chief Don Pedersen told reporters that Massey dedicated much of his free time to working with at risk-teens and every year volunteered for the Santa sleigh, a holiday event in which officers escort Santa Claus around the city and distribute presents to children.
“He was a friend and trusted colleague who could always be counted on to be the first one to volunteer for an assignment,” Pedersen said of Massey, who was a Medal of Valor recipient. “The community today has lost a dedicated police sergeant.”
Megan Gallagher, 28, a former community service officer who worked with the department for five years, was shocked when she heard the news about Massey, a colleague who had served as her mentor.
“He was someone I looked up to and someone I trusted at the station. Being one of the few females there, it’s kind of hard to talk to everybody,” she said. “When I started there, we have to get our uniforms and he offered up his jacket so I didn’t have to spend the money. He made my first days there comfortable. He was an automatic friend from Day One.”
On behalf of Massey’s family, the department has set up the Sgt. Curtis Massey Memorial Fund. Donations can be sent to Culver City Employees Federal Credit Union, 9770 Culver Blvd. Culver City CA 90232.
On the morning of the accident, I had a ten a.m. audition at Culver Studios at the junction of Washington Blvd. and Culver Blvd. for a chance to play Meryl Streep’s psychiatrist in a Nancy Meyers movie. My wife, the actress Alley Mills, had a ten a.m. rehearsal call at her soap opera, “The Bold and the Beautiful,” at CBS Television City, Fairfax and Beverly in Hollywood. We live on the west side in Venice.
At 8:45, I turned on 1070 News Radio to hear the traffic report. All lanes closed on the 10, it said, and as a result, eastbound traffic on Venice Blvd. and Washington Blvd. was virtually at a stand-still. Both of us panicked. “Damn it,” I muttered, reminding myself of Jack Bauer on “24.” “One more inconvenience in Los Angeles.”
We both flew out of the house. I shark-drove side streets and managed to get to my audition only ten minutes late. Alley was tardy by three quarters of an hour. So was everyone else in the cast. And as the day went on, we heard stories of actors, directors and crew people in the same fix all over the city. I remember thinking, “It’s like a movie, like ‘Crash,’ or something. One incident happens and dozens of lives are affected.”
The next day, I looked in the paper to find out what had occurred that had driven me so nuts. The small piece on the inside of the California section I’ve re-printed above was what I found. When I read it I remembered that Alley, when she’d heard that the cops were distributing toys for kids, had gone to the toy store run by a Vietnamese couple next to the old Venice Fox Theater and bought three brand new bicycles. She’d loaded them into our Ford van and driven them over to the station on Culver Blvd. It was a nice black cop who thanked her for them, she said, so I guess it wasn’t Curtis Massey.
Later that morning I got a call from my daughter Susie Breitbart, Andrew’s wife and the mother of their four young kids. “Dad,” she asked me, “do you remember years ago a police officer stopped you for speeding and recognized you from TV and said, ‘You’re Susie Bean’s father; I went to Pali High with her. I can’t give you a ticket,’ and he let you go?”
“Sure I do,” I said.
“Well, that was my friend Curt from Pali. He’s the officer who was killed in that terrible accident on the 10 yesterday. He was a really good guy,” she said.
Later on that Thursday, Alley got a call from a friend of hers from Bible study. The cop’s wife’s best friend, it turns out, is in her class. Six degrees…
An extraordinary human being is wiped off the face of the earth in a split second and all over town we experience it as just one more annoyance in L.A.
I just sent off a good sized check. Perhaps you’ll do the same







Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?
34 Comments
Mr. Bean, as the granddaughter,daughter, sister and cousin of (3) police officers, thank you for support.
A lovely piece; celebrating the life of someone who touched so many in a positive way. Curtis Massey won’t have a star on Gramman’s (sp) walk, but he sounds like some one whose existent was an exemplary one.
Dennis Miller mentioned this on his show because his producer and sidekick were both caught in the traffic jam. It’s sad to hear such a tragic ending to something that at the time made me laugh. Now we wait to hear what was going on with the moron driving the other car. Then again, nothing will make any sense to the officer’s friends and family.
Thanks Orson.
In Pace Requiscat, Sgt. Massey.
Thank you for such a touching and personal story about a guy who was “just doing a job”. There is just so much negativity towards law enforcement these days, and those spewing the hatred forget that “cops are people too”. After being injured on the job and having to retire after a 27 year career as a cop I had pretty much given up on anyone ever saying anything nice about the police. Thank you again, I may just have to put that on hold. My prayers are with Sgt Massey’s family, and yours.
As I lamented last Wednesday, “Why is it always the nice guys who get caught up by the jerks in this world?”. As I heard the Culver City chief describe this good man, I couldn’t stop the tears running down my face, thinking of all the people whose lives he had touched. Thank you Mr. Bean for sharing his story here.
Rest in Peace, Sgt. Massey, and thank you.
Thank you for memorializing this man’s service to us. And thanks to all the posters for their kind words. They are greatly appreciated.
Thank you for the beautiful article, Mr. Bean!
Rest in peace, Sgt. Massey, and thank you for your service!
“Massey, who is survived by a wife and three young children…”
This breaks my heart.
What a horrible loss for all of us, but especially his wife and children.
God bless and God speed Sgt. Massey.
Thank you for bringing this to our attention Mr. Bean.
Mr. Bean,
Seeing this article, I grieve for Sgt. Massey’s wife and kids. Only God knows exactly why this happened. Thank you for the touching article. God speed to the Massey family on this tragic loss. May God give them strength and comfort in this very difficult time.
ARON: I think your hood is showing,,,,,,,,
Such a sentimental, heartfelt post, Mr. Bean. Someone commented that we don’t often if at all hear or read of compliments and gratitude-statements about our law enforcement, and, I would like to counter that by adding my sympathies to Mr. Massey’s family and prayers for Mr. Massey’s eternal rest. We don’t often read good things about law enforcement, yes, but the many ways that they quietly, daily, go about protecting and defending our lives does not go unnoticed.
As the wife of a police officer with 4 young children, stories like this are heartbreaking. God bless the Massey family, and you, Mr. Bean for a beautifully written tribute.
SOL, it is ‘noble’ to be in that line of work…that he worked every day protecting others from harm only to be killed in such a senseless accident seems ’sacrificial’ to me. And meaningful, and even more tragic.
Thanks for this wonderful piece….a reminder that we all need to better appreciate those who put their lives on the line every day…and to remember one man’s inconvenience can be the biggest tragedy in another man’s family’s life. I hope people contribute to the fund.. Because of this piece, we’ll never forget Sgt. Massey. Seems to me like he deserves that. May God bless his family.
SOL,
I think the thing here is that you rarely hear any griping about their garbage man, shop keep or bartender (unless s/he cuts you off) and that we don’t stop to thank our first responders enough.
If a mailman or garbageman was killed in such a senseless way, I’d be just as upset – especially if I had gone to high school with them, as I did Curt.
Alley Mills married to this fool. Now that’s a tragedy.
Thank you for your thoughtful comments about Sgt. Curtis Massey, Orson. I live in this area, too, and I know every place you mentioned in your article. I feel so, so sorry for his family and friends.
The accident that killed Sgt. Massey and the driver of the other car that was going the wrong way on I-10 should remind all of us that life it too short, too precious, and it can end when we least expect it.
By the way, we have a mutual friend, my roommate. Her name is Cleta. She has known you for a long time.
When I told her I remembered you from the late 1950’s, she was surprised. You played a psychiatrist in one of my favorite movies, “Anatomy of a Murder” (1959). Being a jazz fan, I love Duke Ellington’s soundtrack for that film. I also enjoyed Irv Kupcinet’s brief appearance when he gets off the train. James Stewart’s role in that film is one of his finest. And I still have a crush on Lee Remick. That film also introduced me to Ben Gazzara and George C. Scott.
Living in Chicago, I was familiar with Rush Street, Mr. Kelly’s, Figaro’s, The Gate of Horn, and the Second City. I lived in Old Town from 1964 until I moved to California in 1986. In fact, I worked at a blues club in Old Town in the mid-1960’s. It was called Big John’s. I believe you knew the manager, Bobby Wettlaufer, who earlier managed the Gate of Horn.
Someday I hope to meet you, Orson.
George Spink
Los Angeles
Email: georgespink@gmail.com
SOL – Next time you’re a victim of a crime feel free to call the Department of Sanitation and see where that gets you. Otherwise, be thankful that there are people on this planet brave enough to step up to take the job of keeping you safe, even when you are totally unaware it’s taking place. Just because he didn’t die in a blaze of gun fire, makes him no less a hero. Just a hero taken far too soon.
SENILE – Save you drivel for another post…you are just accentuating that fact that you’re an idiot.
Thank you Orson and RIP Sgt.
It’s not how he died that makes Sgt Massey a hero.. I was how he lived his life that did. Rest In Peace Sarge ..God Bless All
I met Curt when he was still in high school. He came to visit his father at work who was then the senior vice president of a life insurance company. Even at that young age, he knew
he wanted to serve. He was contemplating of becoming a paramedic. I thought then that he was just being a young idealist and would change his mind and would have a more “illustrious career”.
I just learned of his passing away today and found that he did not become a paramedic, but an equally noble one.
My condolences to Steve and Jan and to Curt’s wife and children. May he find eternal rest in the comforting arms of God.
I managed an office in West Los Angeles where Curtis Massey worked while he was going to college 20 years ago. He was such a focused young man who knew what he wanted to do with his life. I was so proud when I heard 17 years ago that he had become a police officer with Culver City Police Dept. I had lost contact with him but never forgot him. He was a true honest caring young man and from what I have been reading he remained true to himself. I also worked indirectly with Curtis’ Dad, Steve. To the family please know how sorry I am for your loss, I do not know your pain but I understand. Rest in Peace Curt.!
You must be logged in to post a comment.