NEW YORK – The broad Queens avenue began filling with blue coats early. The footsteps of the saddened officers, the buzz of police talk, fed the medley of sounds of an apprehensive city shaking itself awake.
The temperature was generous for the season. Christmas decorations bedecked doorways and windows, clashing with the morning's solemn event: the funeral of a police officer whose barbaric death has sliced deep into the city's conscience and tested its character.
On Saturday, one week removed from the slayings, the city wept for an officer, Rafael Ramos, New York Police Department Shield No. 6335, who was murdered Dec. 20 along with another officer for their choice of occupation.
The turnout was extraordinary. Although no reliable count was made, it appeared that more than 20,000 police officers came to Queens, from as far away as Wisconsin and California and England, some driving through the night to make it. Bordering streets were shut to traffic for blocks around. Traffic lights continued to change their colors, but there was no traffic, nothing but thick rows of police officers as far as anyone could see.
In these unsettled times, with police officers cautioned against operating alone, about wearing their uniforms when they did not need to, here they were everywhere, melded together and advertising who they were. For the funeral was as much about policing and those who attack it as about a single man. Besides the usual official presence of the governor, the mayor and the police commissioner, this ceremony brought the vice president of the United States.
Police career cut short
Few of the arrivals had met this particular officer. He came to police work late and had not done it long. He was 40 and knew the job for just three years. But his end came engulfed in symbolism. There were the haunting echoes from past murders of police officers. And there was the overlay of the persisting protests over race and policing that have followed Eric Garner's death by chokehold on Staten Island in July and that of Michael Brown, shot by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August. In neither case were the officers involved indicted.
The brief seconds of the killings are well known. Ramos sat with his partner, Wenjian Liu, in a squad car, on a Brooklyn street corner on an unremarkable afternoon. Without warning or provocation, the officers were gunned down execution style by an assassin expressing an intent to end the lives of police officers. The killer, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, then shot himself on a nearby subway platform.
The service for Ramos was held at Christ Tabernacle Church, a brick, flat-roofed structure, re-imagined from a movie theater and a dress store, nestled in a lively commercial strip.