| Service
to others is something to which Bosley has dedicated his life. A Vietnam
veteran who earned two Purple Hearts and a Navy Commendation Medal,
Bosley said the war was a defining moment in his life, one that will
stay with him forever.
“I promised
God that if I got out alive I’d spend the rest of my life in service
to others,” he said.
He took a special
interest in helping children, in part, he said, because of all the
suffering Vietnamese children he saw during the war. After he returned
home, he donated his time coaching kids in the Romulus Athletic
League and in helping to prevent teen suicides by speaking at high
schools and before youth organizations about the topic.
After the war
he came to Michigan from Ohio to work for the Ford Motor Company.
Later, he joined the former Department of Mental Health as a child
care worker at two psychiatric hospitals, the most recent at the
Detroit Psychiatric Institute. He earned a bachelor’s degree in
Concordia College in Ann Arbor.
Bosley has found
working with the mentally ill rewarding. Some of the children he
worked with in Detroit still write to him and one is attending West
Point.
As a certified
substance abuse counselor, he leads groups of Alcoholics and Narcotics
Anonymous at the Scott facility.
“Some of these
women’s lives have been like they were living in a war zone,” he
said. “They’ve been abused and neglected. I try to convince them
to put it behind them and move forward. Some have thanked me for
helping them.”
Being named
Officer of the Year is “the icing on the cake. The real rewards
come when I’m able to help someone and in gaining the respect of
my fellow officers,” Bosley, a member of the prison’s Emergency
Response Team, said. Being an officer requires special observational
skills, Bosley said. “I try to pay attention to behavior so I can
head off a problem before it escalates into a real crisis.” Appropriate
intervention is important, too. You have to be able to assess the
situation and decide quickly how best to proceed so you can avoid
a confrontation. Sometimes that requires talking; sometimes you
have to postpone a discussion until the prisoner is calmer.”
The RTP at Scott
is small – 39 prisoners – allowing Bosley an opportunity to know
each prisoner and be aware of changes in behavior that might signal
a pending crisis. As a man working in a prison for women, Bosley
believes his award also honors the other male officers working in
female prisons.
“All the male
housing unit officers I know are honorable and professional,” he
said. “They would never become involved in inappropriate behavior
with prisoners. As a male officer you sometimes get accused of sexual
misconduct because some women use that threat to try to manipulate
officers. If it happens you just have to carry yourself with pride,
not let anyone scare you.”
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