"Twenty-five years ago, there was no National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial to honor those dedicated law enforcement officers who put the safety and protection of others ahead of their own, and far too many of our law enforcement heroes went unrecognized and unheralded," said NLEOMF Chairman and CEO Craig W. Floyd, who has led the organization since its inception. "Today, our nation's law enforcement officers are more appreciated and safer, because of the work of the Memorial Fund and our partners and supporters."
Legislative efforts establishing the Memorial Fund were led by former U.S. Representative Mario Biaggi, a 23-year veteran of the New York City Police Department who was wounded 10 times in the line of duty, and former U.S. Senator Claiborne Pell of Rhode Island, who died this past January.
Five years after President Reagan signed the legislation authorizing its creation, ground was broken on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in October 1989. Two years after that, on October 15, 1991, the nation's monument to fallen law enforcement officers was formally dedicated in a ceremony officiated by President George H.W. Bush.
"For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes, forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines," President Bush said at the time.
The Memorial includes the names of every known U.S. law enforcement officer who has died in the line of duty, dating back to the first recorded officer death in 1792. The NLEOMF has overseen the engraving of all 18,661 names on the Memorial, and, in partnership with the United States Park Service, maintains the three-acre parkland on which the Memorial rests.