Paul R Bauer

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Paul R Bauer

Birth
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Death
13 Feb 2018 (aged 53)
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Burial
Alsip, Cook County, Illinois, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.6895651, Longitude: -87.768029
Plot
Section 18 Block 24 Lot 11
Memorial ID
View Source
District 18 - Chicago Police Department Commander, Paul R. Bauer, was mortally wounded Tuesday, February 13, 2018.
He was shot while assisting a tactical team at the State of Illinois Center, 100 West Randolph Street, Chicago.
Commander Bauer was transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
He was a 31 year veteran of the Chicago Police Department.
Paul is survived by his wife, Erin and daughter, Grace. He is also survived by countless brothers and sisters in blue.
Wake: 3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Friday, February 16, 2018. Nativity of Our Lord Church, 653 W. 37th Street, Chicago.
6:00 p.m. St. Jude Police League of Chicago.
Funeral: 10:00 a.m. Saturday, February 17, 2018. Nativity of Our Lord Church, 653 W. 37th Street, Chicago.
Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, 6001 W. 111th Street, Alsip.
Commander Paul Bauer Spent 31-Year CPD Career
The veteran Chicago police officer served in districts throughout the city and headed up the department's mounted division.


CHICAGO, IL — Sadly, many Chicagoans only will be hearing the name Paul Bauer in the wake of the tragic shooting Tuesday at the Thompson Center that left the off-duty Chicago police commander dead as he was trying to help fellow officers apprehend a suspect. But the 31-year veteran of the force had served in a variety of roles across the Chicago Police Department that many of those same residents might already have interacted with the officer and not realized it.
Bauer joined the CPD in 1986, and his career led him to work all across the city from the South Side to the 18th or Near North District, where he was named commander in 2015. During his time in that district, Bauer participated in the monthly Coffee With a Commander program, a reach-out initiative that allowed the public to meet and talk with the officers who serve their community.
In a September 2017 interview aired on WCIU-TV, Bauer praised the program as being instrumental in building trust between residents and police, a trust that has been lost following shooting incidents.
"I encourage you to approach a police officer, because we're happy to meet you, we're happy to have your support," Bauer said in the interview, adding that he received more community members thanking him during his time as 18th District commander than at any other time with the department.
Before he was in charge of the Near North District, Bauer led CPD's mounted division and was in charge of the officers on horseback as a lieutenant.
"There's no better way of moving a crowd than with a horse," he told CBS 2 Chicago's Mai Martinez in a September 2013 interview. "They don't want to touch the horse, nor do they want the horse to step on them." Heading up that unit meant managing 30 horses and officers at some of the city's biggest events, such as the Taste of Chicago. It also meant handling crowd control during the unruly celebration around Wrigleyville after the Chicago Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 2013.
Discussing his work with the mounted division also showcased a quality that Bauer's friends and colleagues talked about: his sense of humor. "You don't have to buy them lunch. They don't complain," he told Martinez concerning the benefits of working with his four-legged partners.
Working with the horses also had a profound effect on Bauer. Each of the animals shares the name of a Chicago police officer killed in the line of duty, something that didn't go unnoticed by Bauer.
"It does affect you emotionally," he said about the horses and their namesakes during a November 2012 WGN News interview. "You may not have known them personally, but they were one of us. "WATCH: Bauer talks to WGN News in 2012 about working with the horses in the Chicago Police Department's mounted division.
Bauer's dedication to fallen officers went beyond the station house, too. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, he helped the families of officers hurt or killed in the line of duty through the nonprofit Chicago Police Memorial Foundation.
Bauer also participated in the public art project Horses of Honor. That initiative had local artists decorate life-size, fiberglass horses dedicated to the memory of Chicago police officers who died or were injured on the job. The horses then were displayed throughout the city beginning Sept. 11, 2014.
Bauer, 53, is survived by his wife, who works at the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, and his daughter.
Published: The Patch – February 13, 2018

Paul R. Bauer; Chicago Police Department Commander 18th District; beloved husband of Erin nee Molloy; loving and adored father of Grace; devoted son of Paul and Annette Bauer; cherished brother of Pam (Andy) Howell, Sue (Frank) March and Jane (Chris) Schuleit; dear brother-in-law, uncle and friend of many.

Visitation Friday, February 16th at from 3 to 9 p.m. and Saturday, February 17th from 8:30 a.m. until time of Funeral Mass 10 a.m. at Nativity of Our Lord Church (Corner of 37th Street and Union Ave.). Interment Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations to Nativity of Our Lord Church or the Chicago Police Department Memorial Fund are appreciated.

Arrangements entrusted to the Dalcamo Funeral Home 470 W. 26th Street Chicago, Illinois.
District 18 - Chicago Police Department Commander, Paul R. Bauer, was mortally wounded Tuesday, February 13, 2018.
He was shot while assisting a tactical team at the State of Illinois Center, 100 West Randolph Street, Chicago.
Commander Bauer was transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
He was a 31 year veteran of the Chicago Police Department.
Paul is survived by his wife, Erin and daughter, Grace. He is also survived by countless brothers and sisters in blue.
Wake: 3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Friday, February 16, 2018. Nativity of Our Lord Church, 653 W. 37th Street, Chicago.
6:00 p.m. St. Jude Police League of Chicago.
Funeral: 10:00 a.m. Saturday, February 17, 2018. Nativity of Our Lord Church, 653 W. 37th Street, Chicago.
Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, 6001 W. 111th Street, Alsip.
Commander Paul Bauer Spent 31-Year CPD Career
The veteran Chicago police officer served in districts throughout the city and headed up the department's mounted division.


CHICAGO, IL — Sadly, many Chicagoans only will be hearing the name Paul Bauer in the wake of the tragic shooting Tuesday at the Thompson Center that left the off-duty Chicago police commander dead as he was trying to help fellow officers apprehend a suspect. But the 31-year veteran of the force had served in a variety of roles across the Chicago Police Department that many of those same residents might already have interacted with the officer and not realized it.
Bauer joined the CPD in 1986, and his career led him to work all across the city from the South Side to the 18th or Near North District, where he was named commander in 2015. During his time in that district, Bauer participated in the monthly Coffee With a Commander program, a reach-out initiative that allowed the public to meet and talk with the officers who serve their community.
In a September 2017 interview aired on WCIU-TV, Bauer praised the program as being instrumental in building trust between residents and police, a trust that has been lost following shooting incidents.
"I encourage you to approach a police officer, because we're happy to meet you, we're happy to have your support," Bauer said in the interview, adding that he received more community members thanking him during his time as 18th District commander than at any other time with the department.
Before he was in charge of the Near North District, Bauer led CPD's mounted division and was in charge of the officers on horseback as a lieutenant.
"There's no better way of moving a crowd than with a horse," he told CBS 2 Chicago's Mai Martinez in a September 2013 interview. "They don't want to touch the horse, nor do they want the horse to step on them." Heading up that unit meant managing 30 horses and officers at some of the city's biggest events, such as the Taste of Chicago. It also meant handling crowd control during the unruly celebration around Wrigleyville after the Chicago Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 2013.
Discussing his work with the mounted division also showcased a quality that Bauer's friends and colleagues talked about: his sense of humor. "You don't have to buy them lunch. They don't complain," he told Martinez concerning the benefits of working with his four-legged partners.
Working with the horses also had a profound effect on Bauer. Each of the animals shares the name of a Chicago police officer killed in the line of duty, something that didn't go unnoticed by Bauer.
"It does affect you emotionally," he said about the horses and their namesakes during a November 2012 WGN News interview. "You may not have known them personally, but they were one of us. "WATCH: Bauer talks to WGN News in 2012 about working with the horses in the Chicago Police Department's mounted division.
Bauer's dedication to fallen officers went beyond the station house, too. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, he helped the families of officers hurt or killed in the line of duty through the nonprofit Chicago Police Memorial Foundation.
Bauer also participated in the public art project Horses of Honor. That initiative had local artists decorate life-size, fiberglass horses dedicated to the memory of Chicago police officers who died or were injured on the job. The horses then were displayed throughout the city beginning Sept. 11, 2014.
Bauer, 53, is survived by his wife, who works at the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, and his daughter.
Published: The Patch – February 13, 2018

Paul R. Bauer; Chicago Police Department Commander 18th District; beloved husband of Erin nee Molloy; loving and adored father of Grace; devoted son of Paul and Annette Bauer; cherished brother of Pam (Andy) Howell, Sue (Frank) March and Jane (Chris) Schuleit; dear brother-in-law, uncle and friend of many.

Visitation Friday, February 16th at from 3 to 9 p.m. and Saturday, February 17th from 8:30 a.m. until time of Funeral Mass 10 a.m. at Nativity of Our Lord Church (Corner of 37th Street and Union Ave.). Interment Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations to Nativity of Our Lord Church or the Chicago Police Department Memorial Fund are appreciated.

Arrangements entrusted to the Dalcamo Funeral Home 470 W. 26th Street Chicago, Illinois.

Inscription

OUT BEYOND IDEAS OF WRONGDOING AND RIGHTDOING
THERE IS A FIELD. I'LL MEET YOU THERE.



  • Created by: Diane
  • Added: Feb 13, 2018
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Diane
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/187309173/paul_r-bauer: accessed ), memorial page for Paul R Bauer (17 Nov 1964–13 Feb 2018), Find a Grave Memorial ID 187309173, citing Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Alsip, Cook County, Illinois, USA; Maintained by Diane (contributor 46786200).