A Collaborative Law Enforcement Training at the NYPD Medical Division: Advancing Ethical Leadership, Morale, Resiliency, and Suicide Prevention
Note: This article is posted on the author’s personal website for reference. It highlights a collaborative law enforcement training event and ongoing initiatives in leadership, morale, resiliency, and suicide prevention. The content is being developed as an exclusive submission for a law enforcement professional outlet. Photos and text illustrate the session and participating personnel.
Introduction
For the past two years, Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD, and Vincent J. Bove have collaborated to deliver transformative trainings on ethical leadership, morale, officer resiliency, and suicide prevention for law enforcement professionals.
Bove and Wakschal continued this work at the NYPD Medical Division on December 19, 2025, building on prior joint presentations there on January 31, 2025, earlier collaborative sessions with the MTAPD on March 28, 2025, and with Peer Professionals at the NYPD Police Academy on November 29, 2024.
Across these sessions, Dr. Wakschal's clinical expertise in suicide prevention was seamlessly integrated with Bove’s motivational leadership perspective, providing officers, peer support teams, and mental health professionals with practical strategies to safeguard well-being while fostering ethical leadership and resilience.
These engagements build on an ongoing, citywide initiative. Bove’s work spans a broad range of efforts across the NYPD, including leadership presentations for the Candidate Assessment Division, continuous collaboration with the NYPD Police Self Support Group, one-on-one follow-ups with personnel through texts, calls, and in-person interactions, precinct roll calls, promotion classes at the police academy, engagement with NYPD PBA units and Transit Districts, fraternal organizations, the NYPD Finest Baseball Team, departmental retreats, and initiatives with other law enforcement agencies and the FDNY.
This sustained, multifaceted approach exemplifies a national model of collaboration for 21st Century American policing, demonstrating how clinical expertise and motivational leadership can be integrated to strengthen morale, resilience, and the overall well-being of law enforcement professionals.
This article highlights the session, the collaborative approach, and lessons learned that can be applied across police departments nationwide, as follows.
On December 19, 2025, a collaborative law enforcement training was conducted at the NYPD Medical Division, bringing together clinical expertise and leadership-based engagement to address one of the most urgent challenges facing policing today: officer suicide and emotional resilience.
The training was led by Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD, founder and lead instructor of the ConQueR Suicide Awareness and Intervention Program, with Vincent J. Bove, CPP, serving as a guest speaker. Together, the presentation integrated evidence-based suicide prevention instruction with ethical leadership and morale-centered insights, offering participants both practical tools and deeper reflection.
A Multidisciplinary and Interagency Audience
Attendees included members of the NYPD Medical Division, Peer Support Professionals, the NYPD Cadet Corps, representatives from the Nassau and Suffolk County Police Departments, sworn law enforcement officers and civilian personnel, mental health professionals and psychologists, as well as partners from organizations such as the Warrior Ranch Foundation and Water Gap Wellness.
The diversity of the audience reflected a growing understanding that suicide prevention in law enforcement is not solely a clinical concern, but a shared responsibility across leadership, peer support, and professional disciplines.
Clinical Leadership: The ConQueR Suicide Program
The core of the December 19, 2025, training was delivered by Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD, whose more than 40 years of experience in suicidology and law enforcement trauma anchored the session with depth and credibility.
Dr. Wakschal's ConQueR Suicide Awareness and Intervention Program—an acronym for Connect, Question, Respond—is designed specifically for law enforcement professionals, emphasizing individual responsibility alongside departmental support.
The program:
-
Encourages a shift from exclusive reliance on departmental interventions to individual responsibility
-
Explores statistical and occupational risk factors unique to law enforcement
-
Examines genetic, developmental, anthropological, and environmental contributors, articulated through Dr. Wakschal's “Six Pillars of Police Suicide”
-
Debunks common myths surrounding suicide
-
Identifies both obvious and subtle warning signs
-
Addresses observational failures that often precede suicide
-
Teaches active listening and direct questioning about suicide
-
Provides practical response options and opportunities to practice newly acquired skills
Dr. Wakschal's instruction drew upon decades of professional experience, including extensive post–9/11 work debriefing NYPD officers, his role as a NYS Trooper PBA Surgeon, and his private clinical practice specializing in suicide risk assessment and treatment planning.
Integration with Motivational Leadership
Complementing this clinical framework, Vincent J. Bove provided leadership and morale-centered insights that reinforced the practical lessons of ConQueR.
By blending motivational guidance with clinical expertise, the training demonstrated how ethical leadership, human-centered resilience, and practical suicide prevention strategies can operate in tandem. This integration equips law enforcement personnel not only to recognize risk but also to foster a culture of support, meaning, and sustained well-being within their units.
Leadership and the Human Dimension
Complementing the clinical framework provided by Dr. Wakschal, Vincent J. Bove offered leadership reflections grounded in decades of experience working with law enforcement and first responders nationwide.
His insights emphasized that suicide prevention and emotional resiliency cannot be separated from morale, meaning, and identity—elements that define the human dimension of policing.
Bove’s reflections highlighted how ethical leadership can transform organizational culture and support individuals in high-stress professions. Key concepts included:
-
Operation Resiliency: Framing resilience as a daily discipline, not merely a crisis response, empowering officers to sustain performance and well-being over time.
-
The Wounded Protector: Recognizing that those who protect others frequently carry unseen burdens, and that acknowledging this reality fosters empathy, trust, and stronger peer support networks.
-
The Symbolism of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier: Drawing parallels between anonymity, sacrifice, and service, reinforcing the moral and ethical commitments inherent in policing.
-
Meaning and Moral Grounding: Insights influenced by Dr. Viktor Frankl and Dr. Conrad Baars, emphasizing affirmation, purpose, and ethical resilience in the face of stress and trauma.
These leadership reflections were deliberately offered to reinforce and complement the clinical instruction provided by Dr. Wakschal. By integrating motivational guidance with evidence-informed suicide prevention strategies, the training created a holistic model in which officers and peer support professionals could apply both practical tools and ethical principles to their daily work.
Through this integration, participants gained a framework not only for recognizing and mitigating risk, but also for cultivating a culture of support, meaning, and resilience—an approach that exemplifies a national model for 21st Century American policing.
A History of Collaboration and Trust
The collaboration between Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD, and Vincent J. Bove reflects a sustained commitment to advancing ethical leadership, resilience, and suicide prevention across law enforcement.
Their partnership began in earnest on November 29, 2024, when Bove delivered his first official presentation following his appointment as NYPD Honorary Law Enforcement Motivational Speaker. The session, held at the NYPD Police Academy in Queens and delivered jointly with Dr. Wakschal, was titled NYPD Employee Assistance Unit: Leading Through a National Crisis ©. Together, they explored leadership, organizational, and human challenges confronting law enforcement during a sustained national crisis, highlighting practical strategies for resilience, ethical decision-making, and organizational morale.
Building on this foundation, Bove and Dr. Wakschal continued their collaboration at the NYPD Medical Division on January 31, 2025, with a presentation titled Leading Through a National Crisis: Empowering Law Enforcement. This session further integrated ethical leadership, emotional resiliency, and evidence-informed suicide prevention, reflecting a shared commitment to supporting NYPD personnel while blending clinical expertise with motivational guidance.
On March 28, 2025, the partnership extended to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Police Department (MTAPD) at their training facility adjacent to Grand Central Terminal. Their joint presentation, Leading Through a National Crisis: Empowering MTAPD Peer Support Professionals, was delivered to a select group of peer support professionals whose dedication exemplifies the highest standards of modern policing. The session emphasized ethical leadership, morale, and resiliency, equipping participants to better serve and sustain their colleagues in challenging circumstances.
Beyond formal presentations, Bove and Dr. Wakschal maintain ongoing collaboration with the NYPD Police Self Support Group through the steady leadership of Peter Pallos. The group’s unwavering dedication to leadership, courage, and resilience provides invaluable guidance to the department while serving as a model of 21st-Century American policing. Bove is honored to contribute to this work alongside Dr. Wakschal and Mr. Pallos, whose combined expertise and commitment profoundly amplify the collective impact on the law enforcement community.
Leadership That Enables Collaboration
Special recognition is due to Peter Pallos of ConQueR Suicide, who also serves as Secretary of the NYPD Police Self Support Group. His steadfast leadership and unwavering commitment to officer wellness have been instrumental in fostering partnerships that bridge clinical expertise, peer support, and principled leadership engagement.
The synergy between Dr. Wakschal's clinical instruction, Bove’s motivational guidance, and Pallos’ organizational leadership demonstrates the power of collaborative, multidisciplinary approaches in law enforcement.
Together, they model how clinical knowledge, ethical leadership, and peer-driven support can be integrated to create sustainable, department-wide strategies for resilience, morale, and well-being.
Professional Reception and Measured Impact
Feedback from participants underscored the effectiveness of this integrated approach. Officers, peer support professionals, and mental health personnel consistently expressed appreciation for the combination of evidence-informed clinical instruction and leadership-driven insights. Many noted that the training not only provided practical tools for intervention but also reinforced ethical decision-making, human-centered leadership, and a culture of support.
The multidisciplinary nature of the audience—spanning sworn officers, civilian personnel, psychologists, and peer support teams—highlighted that suicide prevention and resilience are shared responsibilities, requiring coordinated efforts across ranks, roles, and professions.
By demonstrating how clinical expertise and motivational leadership can operate in tandem, these sessions exemplify a national model of collaboration for 21st Century American policing, one that can be replicated across law enforcement agencies nationwide.
Moving Forward
As law enforcement agencies nationwide confront rising mental health challenges, the collaborative model established by Dr. Stephen Wakschal, Vincent J. Bove, and Peter Pallos offers a replicable framework for strengthening officer well-being:
-
Clinically grounded – leveraging decades of suicidology expertise to inform risk recognition and intervention strategies.
-
Leadership-informed – integrating motivational guidance to foster ethical decision-making, morale, and resilience.
-
Human-centered – addressing the lived experiences, identity, and psychological health of those who serve.
-
Professionally respectful – reinforcing peer support, interagency collaboration, and cultural sensitivity.
Suicide prevention cannot rely solely on policy or training mandates. It must be sustained by ethical leadership, peer responsibility, and a culture that recognizes the humanity of law enforcement professionals.
The integration of clinical instruction with motivational leadership creates a model in which individuals and departments alike are empowered to act proactively, strengthen resiliency, and nurture a culture of support that endures beyond any single training session.
Dedication
This work is offered in gratitude for the dedication and sacrifice of those who serve and protect. May all efforts to strengthen leadership, morale, and resilience be guided by compassion, wisdom, and the enduring commitment to safeguard lives—both of those in service and the communities they protect.
By blending clinical expertise, motivational leadership, and peer-driven guidance, these initiatives reflect a national model of collaboration capable of shaping 21st Century American policing.
About the Author
Vincent J. Bove is the NYPD Honorary Law Enforcement Motivational Speaker, a national speaker, author, and recognized authority on policing issues.
Bove is the recipient of the FBI Director’s Community Leadership Award and the author of Listen to Their Cries and Reawakening America, focusing on ethical leadership, violence prevention, and crisis planning.
His decades of work with law enforcement and first responders provide a unique perspective on how leadership, morale, and human-centered approaches intersect with the imperatives of 21st Century Policing.
As Peter Pallos of ConQueR Suicide and the NYPD Police Suicide Support Group—who has served the organization for 25 years—shared:
“We are confident that our program can serve as a national model on police helping one another. We are hopeful that with individuals like Vincent in our corner, and others who support the NYPD, we will be more effective in our dedication to assist our police family and our communities.”
— Peter Pallos, ConQueR Suicide / NYPD PSSG
This testimonial reflects the program’s credibility and its potential to expand peer support and life-saving impact beyond New York.
Photo Caption 1: Attendees at the December 19, 2025, collaborative training at the NYPD Medical Division, including NYPD psychologists, peer support professionals, and sworn officers participating in the session led by Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD with Vincent J. Bove as a guest speaker.
Photo Caption 2: Vincent J. Bove and Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD, at the NYPD Police Self Support Group Gala at Russo’s on the Bay, Howard Beach, Queens, May 22, 2025, honoring the dedication and service of the PSSG.
Photo Caption 3: Deputy Inspector Peter Hatzoglou, NYPD Medical Division Executive Officer (left), Vincent J. Bove (center), and Lt. Pamela Candia, NYPD Medical Division (right), during the collaborative training at the NYPD Medical Services Division, December 19, 2025.
Labels: Character, Collaborative Policing, Criminal Justice, Events, Law Enforcement, Leadership, Mental Health, NYPD, Policing, Presentations, Public Private Partnerships














