STONECREST, Ga. — Hundreds of Air Force members in dress blues joined Roger Fortson's family, friends and others at a suburban Atlanta megachurch on Friday to pay their final respects to the Black senior airman, who was shot and killed in his Florida home earlier this month by a sheriff's deputy.
People lined up well before the start of the service at the New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Stonecrest to file past the open coffin and say their goodbyes to Fortson, who was shot six times by a deputy responding to a May 3 call about a possible domestic violence situation at Fortson's apartment complex in the Florida Panhandle. He was 23.
Fortson's face and upper body were visible in his Air Force uniform, with an American flag draped over the lower half of the coffin. After viewing the body, many mourners paused to hug one another.
''As you can see from the sea of Air Force blue, I am not alone in my admiration of Senior Airman Fortson,'' Col. Patrick Dierig told mourners, referring to the rows of airmen who took up nearly an entire section of the sprawling church.
''We would like to take credit for making him great, but the truth is that he was great before he came to us,'' said Dierig, who commands the 1st Special Operations Wing at Hurlburt Air Force Base in Florida, where Fortson was stationed.
The Rev. Jamal Bryant opened his eulogy with a story about how civil rights icon Medgar Evers joined the Army during World War II even though he and other Black American service members were fighting for freedoms abroad that they didn't enjoy at home.
The 1963 killing of Evers, a Mississippi NAACP leader who was gunned down by a white supremacist, ''showed all of America that you can wear a uniform and the uniform won't protect you, that regrettably sometimes the skin you wear is more of a magnet to opposition than the uniform that you bear," Bryant said. ''Because in America, before people see you as a veteran, as an airman in the United States Air Force, they'll see you as a Black man.''
Bryant also called for justice in Fortson's killing.