First, the police officer will get nothing, and probably worse of all - will not care.
Ultimately, police officer's do have to jump through a lot of hoops to get into the force, the irony is that all the individuals I know who have made it fall, literally into at least one of the following categories:
1. Anger problems.
2. Abusive towards wife.
3. Cheats on wife.
In particular, and this is not to imply that all officers are like this, one lady who worked for me was married to a soldier-turned-police officer. I found it sad that he had 3 children with her, literally left her the day he was accepted on the force. He had some serious anger problems, and clearly, in leaving, other problems existed. He moved in with a 17 year old girl he was 'in love' with and less than a year later moved back in with my former co-worker. I believe recently he got a commendation, and I can tell you that the few times we've crossed paths - simple hellos with daggers were on his mind. That guy is a walking time bomb, and I've met a few others.
1. Had a police officer threaten to kill my golden retriever on sight if it touched him. Read that as, my leashed 1 year-old, friendly dog who occassionally still jumps on folks as he is young and still being trained was threated with death because this guy had K9 issues.
2. Had a situation a while back where I came home from running (I run at odd hours, but most everybody in my community knows this nowadays) to find a police officer sneaking around the apartment complex. He popped out and scared the living **** out of me enough that he thought I was trying to bolt or something. Lucky me, my downstairs neighbor is also a police officer, who was out smoking on his porch and vouched for me and my regular routine of riding/running at odd hours of the night.
I've also met some very nice police officers in 32 years, but the odds on favorite is that they always seem to make me wonder, exactly, how the hell did they pass a psychological evaluation?