America's wounded cops find hope, healing and second chance through officers who refuse to leave them behind

The hardest day in a wounded police officer's life isn't always the day they're injured in the line of duty.For many, retired Las Vegas police Lt.Randy Sutton said, it's the day they realize they've been forgotten.Sutton knows that feeling firsthand.
After surviving a career-ending stroke, the former officer founded The Wounded Blue, the nation's only nonprofit dedicated exclusively to injured and disabled law enforcement officers.HEROIC ICE OFFICERS, STAFF MEMBER OPEN UP ON GROWING DANGERS: ‘AM I GOING TO DIE?'Randy Sutton speaks at a fundraiser supporting an injured police officer.(Wounded Blue)Over the past eight years, the organization has helped more than 17,000 officers nationwide through peer support, advocacy and critical resources.As America celebrates its 250th birthday, Sutton hopes the nation takes time to recognize not only those who wear the badge, but also those whose service continues long after they've left it behind.
Help us uncover what's happening in your [email protected] @fndstephprice @StephenyPriceThe best investigations often start with a viewer tip."If you had asked me what I'd be doing in my retirement years after 34 years of police service, this never would've been in the informational packet of my own brain," Sutton told Fox News Digital.
"But fate works in very, very strange ways."FIRST ON FOX: BEHIND THE SCENES OF ARLINGTON’S MEMORIAL DAY TRIBUTE FOR AMERICA’S 250TH BIRTHDAYRandy Sutton provides peer support to an injured officer.(Wounded Blue)Those twists of fate began one night while Sutton was patrolling the Las Vegas Strip."I literally felt my brain slowing down," he recalled.
"I stopped the car and said, 'Get me medical.I'm having a stroke.'"The stroke ended his law enforcement career, but Sutton said what happened after he left the hospital changed the course of his life even more.HEROIC ICE OFFICERS, STAFF MEMBER OPEN UP ON GROWING DANGERS: ‘AM I GOING TO DIE?'"I lost my career," he said.
"I lost my i...