When nine police officers enter her restaurant this waitress s day took a drastic turn

<p>When nine police officers enter her restaurant&comma; this waitress&rsquo&semi;s day took a drastic turn&period; When Jessica Dunbar saw a group of police officers walk into the restaurant where she worked&comma; a strange feeling washed over her&period; The waiter sensed that something was wrong and soon discovered that her gut instinct was correct&period; What she did next left the cobb stunned&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Dunbar works as a server at the Red Robin at Polaris Fashion Place Mall in Columbus&comma; Ohio&period; She&rsquo&semi;s the daughter of a retired policeman who spent many years employed as an officer for Blandin Township&period; Dunbar is also a mother herself&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On April 10&comma; 2016&comma; the state capital was wronged by a terrifying incident&period; The SWAT team was called upon to issue a felony warrant to a man suspected of being involved in an arson blaze that had occurred the previous day&period; But when they went to confront him at his home&comma; tragedy struck&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The suspect&comma; Lincoln Rutledge&comma; who was 44 at the time&comma; shut himself into his building and refused to come out&period; He then fired a gun into an armored SWAT vehicle parked outside&period; Officer Steve Smith was hit during the standoff and was rushed to the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in critical condition&period; Two days later&comma; it was announced that Smith had died&comma; making him the 54th member of the Columbus police force to be killed in the line of duty&period; Coincidentally&comma; the officer was also 54 years old&comma; and he&rsquo&semi;d been working with the Columbus Division of Police for 27 years&period; He left behind a wife and two grown-up children&comma; Brittany and Jesse&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Columbus Chief Kim Jacobs shared the heartbreaking news and said Smith would be sorely missed by his friends and colleagues&period; « We&rsquo&semi;ve lost a family member&comma; the city lost a true hero&comma; a true guardian and protector&comma; » she told WCMH Columbus&period; « He loved life&period; His legacy truly is about living life to the fullest&period; He lived at 100 percent&comma; 100 miles per hour&period; » Officer Kevin Wheeler&comma; who became his friend almost 20 years earlier after they worked together in the aviation unit&comma; also paid tribute&period; « He would take the shirt off his back for anybody in the unit or anybody that he knew that he could help out&comma; even outside the unit&comma; and brought all of our spirits up&period; Just unbelievable&period; »<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Smith was laid to rest on April 19th&comma; with a funeral taking place in Westerville&period; Hundreds of uniformed cops from his and other departments arrived to pay their respects to a fallen hero&period; Smith was honored with a bagpiper&comma; a riderless horse&comma; a gun salute&comma; and a helicopter flyover&period; Following the emotional ceremony&comma; a group of Smith&rsquo&semi;s co-workers decided to get something to eat&comma; so they headed to the nearby Red Robin for a casual meal&period; It was then that they encountered Dunbar&comma; who had an immediate sense of concern&period; The nine cops were sitting in Dunbar&rsquo&semi;s section&comma; and she asked them how they were doing&period; « The one guy said&comma; &lsquo&semi;You know it&rsquo&semi;s always a rough day when you got to put a brother in the ground&comma;' » she told WCMH Columbus&period; « Right after that&comma; I was like&comma; &lsquo&semi;I&rsquo&semi;m I got to do something nice&period;' »<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The young mother had heard about Smith&rsquo&semi;s story&comma; and she pondered over what she could do to make the officer&rsquo&semi;s day a bit better&period; After they&rsquo&semi;d placed their orders&comma; then as the bereaved cops tucked into their food&comma; she came up with an idea&period; When they asked for the check&comma; Dunbar gave it to them&comma; but instead of presenting them with their &dollar;123-dollar bill&comma; she placed the check face down on the front&period; The charge was zero dollars&comma; and on the back&comma; she scrolled a touching message for the group&period; « Officers&comma; your bill is on me today&comma; » the note read&period; « I can&rsquo&semi;t imagine the day you&rsquo&semi;re all having&comma; let alone what you have to go through every day&period; I hope your days get better&period; So much respect&period; &num;WeSeeYou &num;PoliceLivesMatter &num;RIPOfficerSmith&period; »<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Lieutenant Jeff Shelton from the Wellington Police Department was one of the cops at the restaurant&comma; and admitted that they couldn&rsquo&semi;t have predicted what Dunbar did&period; « It really touched all of our hearts&comma; » he told WCMH&period; « We weren&rsquo&semi;t expected to be treated any different than normal&comma; and just for somebody to come out and do that&comma; it really made our day&period; » Shelton added that the act of kindness made the group even more emotional&period; « We were crying all day&comma; and then you got a bunch of guys and female officers in there crying&comma; » he divulged&period; « Everybody at the table&comma; uh&comma; basically started crying&period; There wasn&rsquo&semi;t a dry eye there&period; »<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Dunbar revealed that she was inspired to help because Smith&rsquo&semi;s story reminded her of her own family&comma; specifically the difficult situations her father put himself through in his line of work&period; « He left behind a wife and kids&comma; » she said of Smith&period; « It could have been me&comma; it could have been my dad&period; » And she added that she was extremely touched by how grateful the police officers were for her thoughtful gesture&period; « Just to have a bunch of police officers&comma; I mean&comma; men and women that protect us&comma; I mean&comma; that&rsquo&semi;s what they do&period; And people look up to them and have them shake my hand and say thank you to me&comma; that was incredible&period; »<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Dunbar&rsquo&semi;s actions were shared on the Ohio Going Blue Community Facebook page&comma; and the post soon received over 10 thousand likes&period; The server and her family were invited to be guests at the Lorain County Police Memorial&comma; and commenters were quick to call the young woman awesome and praise her for a good deed&period; « Thank you for the support to our many brave and wonderful officers&comma; » Jeff Hughes wrote&period; Another commenter&comma; Julie Zielinski Morgan&comma; added&comma; « My husband was one of the officers at the Polaris Red Robin with a group&period; They stopped there to eat after the funeral&period; He called to tell me about it right away&period; Deeds like this are never expected but always appreciated&period; Sincere thank you from a police wife&period; »<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Dunbar revealed during an appearance on Fox and Friends with Shelton that her former police officer father was very proud of what she did&comma; and she admitted that the moment she told him was one of the only times she had seen him cry&period; The young mom explained that she was pleased to make a small difference in the officer&rsquo&semi;s lives&period; « You can&rsquo&semi;t put a dollar amount on making somebody happy&comma; » she added to WCMH Columbus&period; « I just wanted to do something nice&comma; honestly&period; I mean&comma; I don&rsquo&semi;t know how it feels to be in that situation and make their day just a little bit better&period; » If you like the story&comma; please give it a thumbs up and consider sharing it with someone who may find it interesting&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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