Leander - Liberty Hill Edition | October 2024

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BY BRITTANY ANDERSON

Before Jorge and Kim Pastore moved to Austin in 2019, he worked as a reghter paramedic in Florida.

Jorge Pastore was killed in November 2023 while responding to an Austin Police Department SWAT hostage call.

PHOTOS COURTESY JORGE PASTORE FOUNDATION

Jorge Pastore Foundation bolsters law enforcement

Drew Kabbah, one of Jorge’s teammates, attended a sponsored training at Staccato Ranch earlier this year.

Kim Pastore is honoring the legacy of her late husband, Jorge, through the Jorge Pastore Founda- tion, which seeks to provide training opportunities for law enforcement, promote mental and physical wellness for ocers, and bridge the gap between ocers and the community. The backstory Before moving to Austin in 2019, Jorge and Kim Pastore owned a karate school in Florida. Jorge Pastore also worked as a reghter paramedic and was passionate about tactical training. After joining the Austin Police Department, Jorge Pastore eventually earned a spot on the Special Weapons and Tactics, or SWAT, team. On Nov. 11, 2023, Jorge Pastore and the APD SWAT team were responding to a hostage rescue call when he was shot and killed by the perpetrator. “Shortly after his death, and with feeling like I could go one of two ways—and I didn’t want to go the ‘never leave my room’ way—I was like, let’s try to do something in his honor, to remember him, and something he’d be proud of,” Kim Pastore said. Diving in deeper One of the foundation’s goals is to create a state-of-the-art training facility in the Austin area. Kim Pastore said many Central Texas ocers have to travel to attend trainings, which are sometimes canceled due to lack of space or funding. The better trained ocers are, Kim Pastore said,

the less likely they are to “get into altercations or make some poor choices.” “We agree that we need police ocers, but let’s get them more training and get them better pre- pared to do this dicult job that not many people are willing to do,” she said. The facility is looking to include: • A realistic space to run through scenarios and improve tactical skills • Wellness programs • Mentorship opportunities • Oce space for debrieng sessions and education Specic plans for the facility are still a work in progress, Kim Pastore said. In the meantime, the foundation has already hosted pistol and rie classes with local ocers, and is also looking at implementing defensive and tactical classes. What happens next? The foundation will host its Humble Warrior Games at Reveille Peak Ranch in Burnet on Nov. 10. The event will feature a 5K trail run, a team obstacle challenge and tactical activities. “We’re trying to make it a day where we’re raising funds and awareness for the foundation and funds for our 2025 training initiatives while also creating a space for the rst responder community, along with civilians, to hang out and enjoy each other’s space and camaraderie,” Kim Pastore said. “That was very important to Jorge.”

Jorge with best friend and police partner Felix Perez.

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Humble Warrior Games • Nov. 10 • $35 (in-person and virtual 5K), $50 (obstacle course team challenge) • 105 CR 114, Burnet • www.jpastorefoundation.org

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