Leah Waters Murphy, age 54, of Lake City passed away unexpectedly at home on April 14, 2021. She was born on February 22, 1967 to Ted Harris and Dolly Waters. Leah married Brian Murphy; they spent a loving ten years together.
Leah was a member at the Lake City CRC where she enjoyed being a Sunday school teacher, being part of prayer groups, and women s bible study. Leah also enjoyed fishing, basketball, bowling, going to the movies, riding horses, and playing pool. She worked as a computer service worker, along with retail and factory job. She earned an associate degree at Alabama University.
Leah is survived by her husband Brain Murphy, son Nickolas Jones of Madison Heights, brother Marcus Waters of Madison Heights, mother Dolly Waters of Madison Heights, sister in-law Dawn (Jeff) Webster of Sterling Heights.
Whether it is saving someone’s life, bringing a dangerous criminal to justice or safeguarding a vulnerable victim, it really is a job like no other. And this is also true of so many of our public services, not just policing.”
Ali Livingstone has penned a new book about his life in policing and his mental health breakdown
- Credit: Contributed
After leaving the constabulary, Mr Livingstone took up a role as a pastoral officer at a local high school.
He added: “I still can’t quite believe that my book, Broken Blue Line, is out there and people are reading my story. I wrote it when I was very poorly, so it is a very honest account of my career and then my mental health breakdown.
Whether it is saving someone’s life, bringing a dangerous criminal to justice or safeguarding a vulnerable victim, it really is a job like no other. And this is also true of so many of our public services, not just policing.”
Ali Livingstone has penned a new book about his life in policing and his mental health breakdown
- Credit: Contributed
After leaving the constabulary, Mr Livingstone took up a role as a pastoral officer at a local high school.
He added: “I still can’t quite believe that my book, Broken Blue Line, is out there and people are reading my story. I wrote it when I was very poorly, so it is a very honest account of my career and then my mental health breakdown.