Sea of blue mourns slain New York cop

NYPD Officers Shot

Pallbearers carry the casket of New York City police officer Rafael Ramos following funeral services at Christ Tabernacle Church, in the Glendale section of Queens, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2014, in New York. Ramos and his partner, officer Wenjian Liu, were killed Dec. 20 as they sat in their patrol car on a Brooklyn street. The shooter, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, later killed himself. AP

NEW YORK – Tens of thousands of officers paid tribute to one of their own at a New York funeral Saturday, as emotions ran high over recent protests against police violence.

But in a sign of the strain between New York’s police force and its mayor, thrown into sharp relief since the officers were shot last week, numerous officers turned their backs outside as Bill de Blasio began to speak.

Vice President Joe Biden said the double murder was felt by the whole country.

“When an assassin’s bullet targeted two officers, it targeted this city. And it touched the soul of the entire nation,” Biden said.

“I believe that this great police force, and this incredibly diverse city can and will show the nation how to bridge any divide.”

Giant screens were installed outside the church for the crowd that overflowed for blocks.

Amid the thousands of New York police, there were also officers from across the country, including from the states of California, Georgia and Indiana.

Tensions have flared in the United States in recent months over what protesters call police’s racism and excessive force against blacks.

Rafael Ramos, 40, was killed alongside Wenjian Liu, 32, on December 20 following nationwide demonstrations after grand juries failed to charge white officers in the separate killings of two unarmed black men over the summer.

The shooter, 28-year-old Ismaaiyl Brinsley, who later killed himself, had posted angry, anti-government comments on Instagram that referenced the black men’s deaths.

Some police and others have pushed back against protesters and claimed officials have been too sympathetic, accusing them of inciting the attack.

They called for a change in tone from officials and for demonstrators to halt protests ahead of the funerals.

Backs turned

Mayor de Blasio, in particular, has been subject to withering criticism from some of the city’s 35,000 police officers for his remarks following demonstrations.

A father of biracial children, de Blasio had told reporters he counseled his teenage son Dante to take extra care when dealing with officers.

Outside the church, in a gesture seen in previous incidents since the killings, a sea of blue-uniformed police turned away in protest as de Blasio took the podium.

Current police and retired officers at the funeral warned the city has to prevent demonstrations from snowballing into the “riots and protests” it experienced in the 1970s.

“What’s happening here in America, it’s got to stop,” retired detective Buddy Mazzio said about rising tensions.

Flowers and mementos are left at a memorial near Tompkins Ave and Myrtle Ave December 21, 2014 in New York near the site where two New York City police officers were shot and killed. New York was reeling Sunday after the murder of two uniformed cops by a man who said he was seeking revenge for the recent killings of unarmed black men by police. AFP

“The mayor’s office has to put more support, to the police commissioner; they have to support their cops.”

But inside, de Blasio steered clear of controversy in his remarks.

Ramos’s “memory will live on in the hearts of his family, his congregation, his brothers and sisters of the NYPD, and literally millions of New Yorkers. We will not forget,” de Blasio said.

Ramos had served in the police force for years and was described as a man of strong faith. He was about to become a chaplain.

“The job can reward you like no other but one day might demand from you everything in return,” Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said.

“For the Ramos family, today is that day.”

Ramos is survived by two children and a wife. A number of charities have offered to support the family financially.

Bratton said Ramos and Liu were “assassinated” because they were police officers.

“We are in a city struggling to define itself, where people are searching for what they stand for and why,” he said.

Bratton promoted the two officers to detectives and named Ramos an honorary chaplain.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo voiced optimism the state would be able to overcome racial and ethnic tensions.

“We will study and reflect, and we will restore the justice system, and we will resolve the differences among us — as we have many, many times before,” Cuomo said.

The funeral of the second policeman, Liu, who has family coming from China, has not yet been scheduled.

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