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Saturday, December 27, 2014

De Blasio speaks at funeral; officers turn their backs - USA TODAY

Elizabeth Weise and David McKay Wilson, USA TODAY 7:56 p.m. EST December 27, 2014







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See and hear a few of the more than 10,000 police officers who attended the funeral service of Officer Rafael Ramos.



Video Transcript

Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)



00:14 We have. Massive police response the largest police response I've
00:18 ever seen in my career. It's removed it's twenty. Attendance but.
00:26 The estimate of 20000. Couple miles. At least here it's also
00:32 the. From the inner Illinois at Urbana Champaign central Illinois. Just
00:48 heard with the jetBlue sponsoring the flight so we were able
00:51 to come out here in the. We came up from New
00:56 Orleans, Louisiana. We've had people from a variety place all across
01:00 country we explore the sheriff's office. Please don't cross country coach
01:05 of sport. Yeah we flew in history. Just shows both Canada.
01:10 There is an important thing to send the message out there.
01:14 And policing has no borders and we're all less saving Pamela.
01:21 It's the sport I think is the strongest feeling just I
01:23 think not only. For us to be part of us in
01:26 the New York. Officers have really appreciate you know all the
01:29 agencies that are coming and I've seen people from. All out
01:32 to Los Angeles to north and south parts of the country.
01:35 It was a really good you know support across entire nation.






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NEW YORK — Vice President Biden honored Rafael Ramos at the slain New York police officer's funeral Saturday.


He spoke of Ramos and his partner, Officer Wenjian Liu, who were shot and killed 7 days ago, ambushed as they sat in their squad car.


"Being a cop was not what they did. It was who they were," Biden said.


Motioning to a sea of blue, police officers from across the USA seated in the church where the funeral was held, Biden said, "It's who you are."


"You all joined for essentially the same reason. There was something about you that made you think that you could help. That you had a duty." That duty, Biden said, was to the rule of law.







The sentiment was echoed by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.


"We are a nation of laws. We are a state of laws. We are a city of laws," he said.


"You represent those laws. No one, no group is above the law. The threats against New York's police are an insult to law-abiding New Yorkers and they will not be tolerated."






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Vice President Joe Biden offered words of comfort to the wife and two sons of NYPD officer Rafael Ramos at his funeral on Saturday. Ramos and his partner Wenjian Liu were gunned down last Saturday in their patrol car. VPC



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00:02 Just send and you've shown tremendous courage. And character. In
00:09 these past few days. You are your father's arms. And he
00:16 was. He was so so we're very proud of you from
00:19 everything. That I hear. And just know his heart loses to
00:25 believe he will be part of your life. The entirety. Of
00:30 your life. Mom. No child should treat deceased parent. My heart
00:41 makes you rich and I know from experience there are no
00:45 words that I can offer. He said profound sense of loneliness
00:50 of Washington right now. But I also know from experience. It's
00:55 time will come. That I won't calm and rob feels memory
00:59 will bring a smile to your lips. Before brings a tear
01:03 here. That's when you know it's gonna be okay. I know
01:09 it's hard to believe that'll happen but I promise you I
01:12 promise you we will have. And my prayer for use that
01:16 would come sooner. Rather than later. I didn't know. Your husband.
01:23 And I didn't know which part. Who were keeping watch it
01:27 myrtle and Tompkins avenue. That terrible afternoon. But I don't roll
01:33 why they were there. They were there to protect and defend.
01:39 As they always. Sometimes fearful. But always watchful.





Ramos started out as a school safety officer but had a dream of becoming a police officer, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said. "He couldn't wait to put on that uniform. He believed in protecting others."


"Those that are called to protect others are a special breed," he said.


Then, speaking in Spanish, de Blasio told the Ramos family and New York that he "was one of your best sons. ... He was a man of much faith and a brave police officer."


As de Blasio spoke, hundreds of officers outside the church turned their backs in a sign of disrespect. Some have said de Blasio contributed to a climate of mistrust toward law enforcement amid anti-police protests.


At a hospital after the Dec. 20 shooting, the police union's president, Patrick Lynch, and others turned their backs on the mayor. Lynch blamed the mayor then for the officers' deaths and said he had blood on his hands.



Police officers turn their backs as New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks at the funeral of New York city police officer Rafael Ramos in the Glendale section of Queens, Dec. 27, 2014, in New York.(Photo: John Minchillo, AP)



Speaking to CNN just after the funeral, Lynch said: "The feeling is real. But today is about mourning. Tomorrow is for debate."


A recurring theme at the funeral was the divisiveness caused by the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner on Staten Island, and how the nation must overcome it.


"An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind," Biden told the mourners, quoting the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.


Although some in the nation might "fear diversity, we celebrate it," Cuomo said. "Yes, we have questions" arising out of recent cases, but with study and reflection those can be overcome.


William Bratton, New York City police commissioner, also spoke and announced to applause that he was appointing Ramos an honorary chaplain of the 84th Precinct in New York. Ramos had been studying to become a lay chaplain when he was killed.






Video Keywords Joseph Biden New Orleans new York city police department total strangers city leaders Saint Louis Washington DC Brooklyn Atlanta Iraq



Tens of thousands of police officers from around the nation and as far away as Canada are expected to arrive for the funeral of slain NYPD officer Raphael Ramos. Mana Rabiee reports. Video provided by Reuters Newslook



Video Transcript

Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)



00:00 The coffin of slain NYPD officer Rafael Ramos was draped
00:05 in the green white and blue of the new York city
00:07 police department. And carried into this queens church by officers while
00:13 his colleagues from his Brooklyn station house to wouldn't salute. His
00:18 funeral is on Saturday but family and loved ones began saying
00:21 their final goodbyes at Friday's weigh in Christ tabernacle George. It
00:26 was my Iraq is an economic wisdom is the absolute best
00:30 friend. That. On this earth. Justin Ramos was in the middle
00:35 of a sophomore year in college when his father was gunned
00:38 down along with his partner. By a gunman bent on killing
00:42 cops police say. My dad have been there for everyone else
00:45 and to see so many people here and it is a
00:47 testament. To how he is as a person. It's been so
00:51 helpful in this difficult. I keep this show on Sunday. Just
00:56 like my brother. Forty year old Ramos is being described as
00:59 a family man close to the audit church put likes to
01:03 work with children. One of the malls and people I know.
01:06 And having as much about him. Is the heights. I couldn't
01:11 hit it does it. But total strangers to never even knew
01:16 the officer paid tribute to Ramos outside Christ tabernacle. His offices
01:21 instead before Clemens is indeed that. A field duty god citizen.
01:27 National state and city leaders will be at Saturday's funeral including
01:31 vice president Joseph Biden. But so too will be tens of
01:34 thousands of police officers. Perhaps as many as 25 with 30000
01:39 by some accounts. There are arriving from Saint Louis Atlanta and
01:43 New Orleans Washington DC and many other cities across the country.
01:47 Including as far away as Canada.





He kept a Bible in his police locker, Biden said.


The NYPD announced Friday that Ramos and Liu had been posthumously promoted to the rank of first-grade detective.


The promotions commonly are given to police killed in the line of duty. They carry with them increased benefits for the families of the slain officers.


Outside the church, police helicopters circled overhead as thousands of uniformed officers thronged the Glendale Queens neighborhood to show their respects to Ramos.


A rumbling phalanx of motorcycles led the funeral procession down Cypress Hills Street to the cemetery. Next came a long procession of buses and city emergency vehicles filled with NYPD officers.


Deputy Sheriff Matt McAllister of San Bernardino County, Calif., had arrived on a red-eye flight from Long Beach courtesy of JetBlue.





At the funeral for NYPD officer Rafael Ramos, New York City Police Commissioner William Bratton promoted Ramos and his partner Wenjian Liu to the rank of detective first grade. The officers were gunned down last Saturday in their patrol car. VPC



Video Transcript

Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)



00:02 Very much. We mourn with them we need them we
00:06 respect them and we're proud of them and we thank them.
00:11 As police commissioner of the city of New York. I am
00:14 so proud of each and every one of them stories they
00:17 just have to tell. And proud of none more than the
00:33 stories of police officer Ramos and Lou both of whom I
00:38 promote today to detective. First rate. He. Thank you vote of
01:05 applause for them. Applause applause so thunderous. That you'll hear it
01:11 at the gates of heaven. And officers Ramos and Lou an
01:15 outstanding guy that.





"We're here to support our brothers and sisters in the NYPD," he said. "We are a brotherhood."


The officers streamed in across the USA. Many were in their dress blues with commendation medals on their jackets, wearing white gloves.


A huge Christmas wreath with shiny ornaments hung over the entrance to Christ Tabernacle Church in a repurposed brick building on Myrtle Avenue in Queens. The street was closed to traffic.


An organist played Silent Night in the bright morning sun on a Saturday morning unseasonably warm for late December


On Friday, an overflow crowd of police, family, friends and dignitaries had packed the church for an eight-hour wake. Six police officers carried Ramos' flag-draped casket into the church as other officers saluted and stood at attention outside the entrance.



Rafael Ramos, left, and Wenjian Liu, right, were killed on Dec. 20, 2014, as they sat in their patrol car on a Brooklyn street.(Photo: New York Police Department via AP)



By early evening, hundreds of additional mourners had filled the streets outside to hear speakers eulogize Ramos and watch the memorial on giant video screens. Joining Ramos' wife, Maritza, and two teenage sons, Justin and Jaden, were Cuomo, de Blasio,Bratton and Roman Catholic Cardinal Timothy Dolan.


"What happened to my father was a tragedy, but his death will not be in vain," said Justin Ramos, a student at Bowdoin College in Maine. "My dad was a hero. He touched so many lives and will continue to do so."


He said his father was his rock and his "absolute best friend."


Ramos' sister, Cindy, wept as she expressed her love for her brother.


"Even though I didn't say it as much as I should, I love you from the deepest depths of my soul," she said. "My brother, my heart aches so much right now. Please pray for me as I know you always did. Help me understand why God took you from me so soon."



“What happened to my father was a tragedy, but his death will not be in vain.”


Justin Ramos, son of slain officer

Pastor Ralph Castillo said Ramos was a beloved member of Christ Tabernacle Church.


"Whether he was helping a mom with a carriage or bringing someone to their seats, he did it with so much love and so much vigor and so much joy," Castillo said.


Ramos, who was 40, served as an usher at Christ Tabernacle and was part of the church's marriage and life group ministries.


As the funeral ended Saturday, thousands of people stood outside silently, at attention, as they awaited the casket. Two trumpeters played Taps.


When the cortège left the church, 12 police helicopters flew in formation above it and two trumpeters played a mournful rendition of My Country, 'Tis of Thee.


Ismaaiyl Brinsley gunned down Ramos and Liu. Brinsley had posted messages on social media about his intent to target police officers and earlier in the day in Baltimore, he wounded an ex-girlfriend.


After the rampage, Brinsley killed himself in a subway station.


The site where the police officers were shot on Brooklyn's Myrtle Avenue has been transformed into a shrine for the fallen men. Piles of bouquets, Christmas wreaths, teddy bears and candles mark the spot.


It has drawn fellow police officers, family, friends, ministers and ordinary New Yorkers for prayer and reflection.


Funeral plans for Ramos' partner, officer Liu, are pending until family members can make arrangements to travel from their home in China.


David McKay Wilson also reports for The (Westchester County, N.Y.) Journal News. Contributing: The Associated Press




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