White-gloved officers wiped tears from their eyes as they stood at solemn attention, saluting the horse-drawn caisson carrying Joe Parise's remains.
It all felt so painfully familiar: An American flag-draped casket. Blue-tipped white roses. Bagpipes wailing "Amazing Grace."
For the second time in just two months, hundreds of corrections officers gathered Tuesday to lay their brother to rest.
Parise, 37, died last week after rushing to rescue a fellow officer who was being attacked by an inmate at Oak Park Heights maximum-security prison. He returned to his post, collapsed and died a short time later.
Fellow union members pronounced his actions heroic. "Joe never hesitated to put himself in harm's way," James Carter, a former colleague and one of Parise's closest friends, told mourners jammed into Fort Snelling Memorial Chapel for the funeral. "No matter what his feelings may have been about you, Joe would do anything to make sure everyone went home safely."
While in the Navy, he refused to abandon ship alongside fellow officers when a fire broke out onboard. Instead, Parise ran toward the flames and extinguished them so no one got hurt, said the Rev. Martin Shanahan.
"He was a hero," Shanahan said, praising Parise's actions from one career to the next.
Years later as a rookie corrections officer, he helped colleagues separate three inmates in the midst of a violent fight.