FREEPORT, Pa. — Thousands of mourners filed into a Pennsylvania banquet hall Thursday to remember the former fire chief who was fatally shot during the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump, who sent a note of condolence hailing him as a hero.
The crowd paying respects to Corey Comperatore and his family appeared to be a mix of friends, neighbors and strangers who wanted to show appreciation for the man who officials said spent his final moments shielding his wife and daughter from gunfire at the campaign rally.
Fire trucks and police vehicles filled the parking lot outside the building. Sharpshooters were positioned on top of the event hall and on nearby buildings as dozens of people waited in line to enter. Among the mourners were firefighters in dress uniforms.
Comperatore, 50, worked as a project and tooling engineer, was an Army reservist and spent many years as a volunteer firefighter after serving as chief, according to his obituary.
Trump sustained an ear injury but was not seriously hurt and has been participating this week in the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.
Trump honored Comperatore during his speech Thursday night accepting the party's presidential nomination, displaying his firefighting gear on the convention stage, kissing his helmet and heralding the ex-chief as ''an unbelievable person.''
Trump said a fund for Comperatore's family and the two men wounded in the attack — David Dutch, 57, and James Copenhaver, 74 — has raised more than $6 million.
Comperatore's visitation Thursday saw a line of hundreds of people at a time stretching through Laube Hall, a space with white brick walls, white linens, white curtains and exposed wooden beams that's normally used for weddings and other celebratory occasions.