A Karen Called 911 Claiming I Was Faking My Paralysis To Steal A Parking Spot. The Officer Ignored My Purple Heart And Ordered Me To Stand Up Immediately. Then He Reached For My Wheelchair, And Things Took A Terrifying Turn.
The Escalation
Hendrickx stepped closer. His hand moved from his belt to the armrest of Travers’ wheelchair.
“You’re getting out of this chair one way or another. Don’t make it harder.”,
For the record, Travers’ voice carried the calm of someone who had faced situations far more dangerous than this.
“I am a paralyzed veteran. I am unable to stand or walk. Any attempt to remove me from this wheelchair will cause injury. I am documenting this statement for any recording devices present.”
He looked directly at Mendes’s body cam, then at the Kroger security camera mounted on a light pole 20 feet away, then at a woman with a phone raised near the store entrance.
“There are at least three cameras recording this encounter. I’ve identified myself as disabled. I’ve offered documentation. You have no legal basis to physically remove me from a medical device.”
“I have a 911 call saying you’re faking.”
“A 911 call isn’t proof. My legs are proof. My medical records are proof. My service history is proof.”
Mendes spoke for the first time, quietly, directed at her partner.
“Tyler, maybe we should just check his documents.”
Hendrickx didn’t turn around.
“I’ve been doing this for six years. I know a faker when I see one.”
He grabbed the armrest of the wheelchair.
“Last chance. Get up, or I’m pulling you out.”
A Badge of Honor Ignored
Travers reached slowly toward his chest. The Purple Heart pin was visible on his hoodie: the distinctive purple ribbon, the gold heart with Washington’s profile.
“This pin was presented to me at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center by a two-star general. It represents a wound received in combat that resulted in my permanent disability.”
Hendrickx glanced at it. His expression didn’t change.
“Anyone can buy those online. I’ve seen the scam. People get sympathy and free parking.”
“This isn’t a scam. This is my life.”
“Then prove it.”
“I’m trying to prove it. You won’t let me.”
Travers reached into the pocket on the side of his wheelchair slowly, keeping his movements visible for the cameras.
“I’m reaching for my wallet. Inside is my VA disability card, my military ID, and my Texas driver’s license showing this address.”,
He produced the wallet. He opened it. Three cards were visible in plastic sleeves. He held it up.
“VA Disability Card. 100% Service Connected Disability. Paralysis Lower Extremities.”
Hendrickx barely looked.
“Military ID. Michael A. Travers. Sergeant First Class, Retired.”
Another card, another dismissal.
“Driver’s License. This address is four miles from here. I’ve lived here for three years. The staff inside that Kroger know me. The pharmacist fills my prescriptions. The manager helped me reach a top shelf last month.”
“Anyone can have fake IDs.”
“These aren’t fake. They’re issued by the federal government and the state of Texas.”
“I’ve seen better fakes.”
The Assault
Mendes had moved to a position where her body cam captured both men: Travers in his wheelchair, documentation in hand, and Hendrickx standing over him with his hands still on the armrest.
“Tyler,” her voice was quiet but urgent. “His legs aren’t moving. Look at them. They haven’t shifted once since we got here. That’s called acting. That’s not how paralysis works. You can’t fake muscle atrophy.”
“Stay out of this, Mendes.”,
Travers looked at Hendrickx with an expression that had faced Taliban fighters and IED craters.
“Officer, I’m going to tell you something and I need you to hear it. On March 14th, 2019, an improvised explosive device detonated beneath my squad in Helmand Province. I saw the pressure plate before one of my soldiers stepped on it. I threw myself between him and the blast. The explosion killed Specialist David Chun and Private First Class Marcus Williams. It severed my spinal cord. I will never walk again.”
He held up the Purple Heart pin.
“This represents that moment. This represents their sacrifice. This represents everything I lost so that a 20-year-old soldier named Rodriguez could go home to his family.”
He set the pin on his lap.
“If you think I would fake this—fake the injury that killed my friends and ended my career—then you don’t understand anything about service, or sacrifice, or what it means to wear a uniform.”,
Hendrickx’s hand tightened on the armrest.
“I’ve heard enough.”
He grabbed Travers’ arm with his other hand.
“You’re coming out of that chair. I’m warning you, and I’m done listening.”
He yanked. Travers’ body came out of the wheelchair sideways. His arm, gripped by Hendrickx, pulled his torso forward while his legs—dead weight, unresponsive—failed to follow in any coordinated way. He hit the asphalt.
