Chicago Police Surprise Young Cancer Patient

"It’s just amazing the courage she’s showing today," said Interim Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson

Six-year-old Madison Pruitt's lifelong wish is to be a Chicago police officer.

Officers in the city's sixth district had prepared to welcome the young girl to the police station Wednesday, but unfortunately their plans were changed.

Shortly before they were supposed to surprise the young girl, they learned Pruitt, who is battling a rare muscular cancer and is under home hospice care, wasn't feeling well enough to come to the celebration.

"Her spirits are well, but she’s doing pretty poorly at this point," said Sgt. Ernest Bradley, of the Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy, or CAPS, the department's community policing program.

That’s when they decided to bring the surprise to her.

Roughly 70 police officers showed up on her doorstep, some even on patrol horses.

"I never imagined that it would be this much," said social worker Lindsay Wooster with Journey Care Hospice. "It’s pretty incredible."

No one imagined that Interim Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson would also be there to grant her wish, presenting her with an Award of Valor.

"It’s just amazing the courage she’s showing today," Johnson said. "That gives us pause to think about our own mortality and families. That’s the reason we do what we do."

When asked why Pruitt wanted to be a police officer, her response was simple.

"Because you get to protect people," she said.

It’s a day her grandmother, Pamlor Nelson, said she will never forget. 

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