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Burbank Tavern`s `Wall of Heroes` Honors Fallen Responders
March 30--BURBANK -- Nearly 14 years ago, a red-headed Burbank police officer only 10 months behind his badge pulled into a Ramada Inn to investigate what appeared to be a pending SUV drug deal.
Twenty-six-year-old Officer Matthew Pavelka was gunned down by a gang member in November 2003, the first Burbank cop to die in the line of fire in 83 years.
He joined seven Burbank officers and firefighters among a "Burbank's Wall of Heroes" unveiled Wednesday at the Story Tavern for emergency responders who gave the ultimate sacrifice.
"The brave men and women of the Burbank Police and Fire (departments) are a large reason why Burbank is the great city that we call home," said tavern owner Brian Slaught, who created the memorial. "Every day, they put their lives on the line for this community.
"This Wall is Story Tavern's way of saying, 'thank you.'"
The short afternoon ceremony, attended by a dozen Burbank police and firefighters and the family of the slain Pavelka, heralded 106 years of city valor.
The wall, set beside the front door of a wooded tavern lined with historic photos from Media Capital founder David Burbank to generations of Lockheed aircraft at 150 S. San Fernando Blvd., was modest.
In addition to the fallen police and firefighters, it included six firefighters and one cop recently honored by their departments.
"Courage is the first of human qualities because it is the quality that guarantees all the others," it says in a quote attributed to Winston Churchill.
There was Marshal Luther Colson, the first Burbank lawman to take a fatal bullet in 1914, fired from a line of willow trees as he strolled along the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks, Straught said.
There was Deputy Marshall Robert Normand, who stopped a flivver for a flawed taillight in 1920 and was killed when a man opened a door and gunned him down.
Burbank police officers Joseph Wilson and Richard Kunkle were each killed when their police motorcycles crashed in 1961.
Burbank fire Engineer John Saltisik was killed the same year when his fire truck was T-boned in an intersection and he was thrown from the vehicle. Firefighter/Paramedic Dan Yonan lost his life in 1999 when he had a heart attack while on the job, Slaught said.
Slaught's grandfather, Lt. Hank Hernandez, a 20-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department, investigated the Los Angeles assassination in 1968 of presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy.
Another Burbank Wall of Heroes mural was painted five years ago at the Police and Fire Department Headquarters Building.
"As we go on, generation after generation, it's so important that each new generation remember," said Burbank police Chief Scott LaChasse, who had served as an LAPD commander in the North Hollywood bank shootout two decades ago. "To recognize the people that we have lost."
For the Pavelka family --parents Mike and Sue, and aunt Kathy Jackson --it was a momentous day.
Not far away, a section of Interstate 5 has been named in honor of Officer Matthew Pavelka.
"It's wonderful," said Mike Pavelka, of Santa Clarita, a retired LAPD detective of 35 years. "It's now been 13 years since Matthew's death.
"It's always heartwarming to see that he is remembered -- and not forgotten."
(c)2017 the Daily News (Los Angeles)