Each year since 1994, NAPO has presented the TOP COPS Citizens Choice Awards® Ceremony. The purpose of the TOP COPS Awards® is to educate the American public about our nation’s heroes and to pay tribute to law enforcement officers in federal, state, county, tribal and local agencies from across the country for actions above and beyond the call of duty during the preceding year. Our TOP COPS are nominated by fellow law enforcement officers. An independent Awards Selection Committee comprised of national law enforcement representatives select, from hundreds of nominations, one TOP COP case from each of the 50 states and U.S. territories. Law enforcement officers from the top 10 cases are selected as our TOP COPS Awards® Winners. In each remaining state, one case has been selected for which the officer(s) will receive an Honorable Mention award.
★ Illinois
Officer Down — Partner Saves the Day
Police Officer Andrew Paulauskas & Police Officer Oscar Asilis | Chicago Police Department, Chicago, IL
Chicago Police Department’s elite 2563 Tactical Team is proactive when it comes to stopping crime, whether its targeting suspected gang members making drug deals, seizing weapons, or working with the Department of Corrections or U.S. Marshals on high-risk arrests. On May 29, 2025, team members Officers Andrew Paulauskas and Oscar Asilis were on Chicago’s west side when they came across Nathaniel Fejerang conducting the tell-tale signs of a drug deal. As the officers identified themselves and approached Fejerang, he took off on foot, with both officers in pursuit. The officers quickly gained ground on Fejerang and took him down to the ground. As Officers Paulauskas and Asilis struggled to subdue him, Fejerang was able to pull a gun from his waistband, firing at point blank range and striking Officer Paulauskas in his upper left thigh.Seeing his partner roll off Fejerang and recognizing he had just been shot, Officer Asilis immediately went into action. In defense of his safety and other officers who were also on the scene, Officer Asilis discharged his service weapon, striking Fejerang multiple times in the head and neck and ending the threat. Officer Asilis immediately turned his attention to his partner, who was now surrounded by fellow officers. They quickly put a tourniquet on Officer Paulauskas’s thigh and carried him to the closest squad vehicle, where they loaded their brother in blue and rushed him to the hospital. While Fejerang succumbed to his injuries, thankfully the tenacious Officer Paulauskas recovered, helped in large part by the medical assistance he received from his fellow officers and the speed at which they got him to the hospital.When Officer Paulauskas was discharged from the hospital the next day, Chicago Police Officers were lined up outside the ER, applauding as he walked out on his own rather than using a wheelchair. Given their bravery and courage while working together to take down a perp who exhibited a strong desire to take down one of Chicago’s finest, and presumably any other officer who stood in his way, Officers Andrew Paulauskas and Oscar Asilis represent what being a “TOP COP” is all about.
Officers Stop Home Invader Before Mass Shooting
Police Officer Timothy L. Bell & Police Officer Juan Alba-Chavez | Chicago Police Department, Chicago, IL
Officer Timothy Bell has been with the Chicago Police Department for seven years and spent the last eighteen months as a Field Training Officer (FTO). He is good at what he does and has three basic rules for new Officers to adhere to: Never Lie, Never Make Anything Up, Never Be Afraid to Ask Any Question. On December 7, 2025, FTO Bell was working with PPO Juan Alba-Chavez, who had been under FTO Bell’s tutelage for just six shifts since graduating from the academy when they responded to a domestic dispute call. Darren Brewster, a felon, broke into the house of a woman he had a previous relationship with, and for back-up this “father of the year” brought with him his fifteen-year-old son. Brewster made his presence known by shooting his gun. Luckily, no one was injured with that shot, including four children, aged eight months to twelve years old, who were also inside the apartment. Moments later a fight broke out in the kitchen between Brewster and an eighteen-year-old male. Officers Bell and Alba-Chavez arrived on the scene as the fight intensified and immediately ran towards the kitchen area to break up the violent altercation. Brewster again fired his handgun, striking the eighteen-year-old male as well as PPO Alba-Chavez in his ballistic vest. The impact knocked PPO Alba-Chavez backwards. FTO Bell immediately returned fire, striking Brewster. It was the first time this seven-year veteran of the force had ever used his service weapon. As a stunned PPO Alba-Chavez dealt with the very painful impact of the bullet, he knew he had two choices: take care of himself and retreat or focus on the important task at hand; making sure his partner was okay and the chaotic and violent situation was under control. To FTO Bell’s expectation, PPO Alba-Cavez displayed the latter, his months long training at the academy and his week with FTO Bell paying off in a real-world situation. PPO Alba-Chavez helped Officer Bell separate the wounded Brewster from the wounded eighteen-year-old and render medical aid to each while making sure Brewster’s son did not get involved. Neither Brewster’s injuries nor the young man’s were life threatening. However, Darren Brewster would be far from unscathed as he was charged with attempted murder, home invasion, and multiple other felonies.As for Officer Alba-Chavez, his ballistic vest did its job, and he was not seriously injured. Displaying determination and quick thinking, each of these “TOP COPS,” a veteran and a rookie, worked in conjunction to deal with a volatile and violent situation that could have turned into a mass shooting resulting in multiple casualties.

