"It brings everything into perspective, and it brings everyone together in the brotherhood and sisterhood," said Trooper Brandon LaBar of the Pennsylvania State Police.
This year, more than 20,000 officers, police survivors, dignitaries, and invited guests joined in the candlelight vigil, which included the reading of 334 names of officers who have been added to the memorial walls, including 116 who ended their watch in 2009. The pre-2009 line-of-duty deaths were discovered by the research of local officers.
This year's vigil began with the story of a fallen officer being told by Craig W. Floyd, chairman and CEO of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund (NLEOMF). Floyd spoke about John Coor-Pender of the Wayne County (N.C.) Sheriff's Office, who was killed in 1816 while escorting a prisoner.
Floyd read off a litany of statistics to prove that the law enforcement profession remains extremely hazardous. In addition to the 116 line-of-duty deaths, 16,000 officers were injured. Floyd added that there was a 23 percent increase in officer deaths by gunfire in 2009.
"One law enforcement officer dies in the line of duty in this country every 53 hours," he said. "America's law enforcement has never been more challenged or more vital."