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Fallen Mesa County deputy continues to save lives through his donated organs

Deputy Derek Geer was shot and killed Feb. 8 by a 17-year-old boy

Denver Post online news editor for ...
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Derek Geer.
Provided by Erin Dolin
Derek Geer

By the time Kate Geer arrived at the hospital, it was too late.

Her husband, , had been shot several times by a teenager and was lying in a hospital bed, . Doctors told her that the loving, selfless man she had built a life with was gone. There was nothing more they could do.

“My friend kept coaxing me to talk to him,” Kate Geer recounted in an interview Friday. “But I couldn’t. Inside, I knew he was already gone. There was nothing to be done except to donate his organs.”

Now, 10 months after the February shooting that killed Geer, his decision has provided the family he left behind with four bittersweet ways to remember — and in a way continue — the fallen officer’s life.

His heart now beats in a new body. His liver powers another person’s metabolism. His kidneys are filtering two others people’s blood.

“It does kind of soften the blow,”  said. “Obviously, we’re still grieving. We will always grieve. But knowing that losing his life wasn’t in vain, knowing that four families are still celebrating their loved ones, it gives me comfort.”

Geer now hopes her husband’s death will help others follow his lead and have the organ donor conversation.

“If by sharing his story and our story to get more people to have this discussion with their loved ones, that would give us comfort and really make us happy through a bittersweet ending,” she said.

Authorities say Deputy Geer, a 15-year veteran, was fatally wounded while trying to confront , a then-17-year-old boy wanted for violation his probation on a sex offender charge. The 40-year-old Navy veteran was trying to question Holzer amid reports of an armed suspect. The two spoke briefly, and the boy asked Geer if he was going to be detained.

Geer said yes and then tried to stop Holzer with a stun gun when the teen ran away.

Investigators say the boy pulled out a handgun, Geer and fled. Holzer was later arrested and charged as an adult with first-degree murder of a peace officer and several other felony accusations. His prosecution , and court records show he is due in court next week for a preliminary hearing.

Geer, the father of 14-year-old Ian and 12-year-old Macey,  two days after the encounter.

“He was first and foremost a family man,” Kate Geer said. “He did everything from that perspective. He didn’t work overtime because he’d rather be with us. To him, I don’t think being remembered was very important because he wanted his legacy to be his kids.”

Deputy Derek Geer and his daughter, Macy.
Provided by The Donor Alliance on behalf of The Geer family.
Deputy Derek Geer and his daughter, Macy.

Geer’s said he was “perfectly suited to law enforcement, always ready to help both his community.” To his wife, he was that and much more.

The couple met through mutual friends in July 1999 while Derek, who was in the Navy, was stationed in Southern California and Kate was moving on after graduating from California State University at Fullerton. By that November, the pair had moved to Grand Junction — where Derek’s family lived — and were married.

“We knew pretty early on,” she said. “We met and married and moved within four months for no other reason than we just knew. It was love and friendship at first sight.”

Kate remembers that shortly after the couple moved to Colorado, she went to get a driver’s license and the topic of organ donation came up.

“I had never checked the organ donation box,” Geer said. “He was the one that prompted the discussion and had me check it. He was supportive of it from the very first moment. He had always been an organ donor on his license.”

Kate and Derek Geer. Provided by The Donor Alliance on behalf of The Geer family.
Provided by The Donor Alliance on behalf of The Geer family.
Kate and Derek Geer. Provided by The Donor Alliance on behalf of The Geer family.

A few years later, Derek Geer became a sheriff’s deputy. On Feb. 8, the deputy — a by-the-book officer who once revived a young woman from a heart attack — woke up early for his day shift, kissed her goodbye and headed off for what would be his last patrol.

“Derek was a hero for this community,” Mesa County Sheriff Matt Lewis said .

Kate Geer is set to ride the during the in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 2. They will be among 30 people on the float, many of whom are either donor recipients or family members of donors.

“Deputy Geer was a remarkable man in life and now beyond,” said Andrea Smith, a spokeswoman for Donor Alliance. “His selfless gift of life after death saved the lives of four others in need. We hope his example will inspire other Coloradans to register their decisions to be organ, eye and tissue donors.”

The Geers have been in contact with the people who received Derek’s organs through letters. Kate Geer said she is open to more communication in the future, but that her husband’s death remains a fresh wound.

“Itap been the hardest 10 months of my life,” she said. “We’re doing OK. You just have to take each day. The kids are doing as well as can be expected, if not better. We’re not letting this tragedy stop our life. I keep kind of taking the kids with me that. We can’t stop living, because dad wouldn’t want us to.”


More on organ donation:

Donor Alliance is the federally designated, nonprofit organ-procurement organization and accredited tissue bank serving Colorado and most of Wyoming. The organization says 67 percent of Coloradans are registered to be organ and tissue donors.

For more information about organ and tissue donation, people can visit . Registration to be an organ and tissue donor can be completed at  or by calling 303-329-4747 or 1-888-256-4386.

The Geer family in an undated photo.
Provided by Erin Dolin.
The Geer family in an undated photo.

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