
More than 300 mourners gathered outside Pomona police headquarters Sunday night for a candlelight vigil, where officers wore black mourning bands with the number "16" — Casillas' badge number — over their badges.
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Flags fly at half staff and Cmdr. Paul Bauer's 18th District is draped in black and purple. A memorial filled with flowers and balloons pays tribute to the commander, who gave his life for the safety of Chicago.
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Hundreds gathered on Monday night to remember Douglas County sheriff’s Deputy Zackari Parrish, who was shot and killed responding to a call.
Read More →Fans booed New Orleans Saints players who knelt before the presentation of the American flag and the singing of the national anthem Sunday at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.
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Thousands of people in Las Vegas attended a public service to honor the life of a hero who lost his life during the mass shooting at a country concert along the strip.
Read More →This week, 156 names will be added to the memorial walls in a Nesconset, NY, park, bringing the total number of first responders who died from illnesses linked to their work at Ground Zero to more than 850, according to John Feal, a 9/11 first responder and president of the FealGood Foundation.
Read More →A Bronx teen blasted the NWA song “F— Tha Police” out his third-floor apartment window Tuesday as thousands of officer were gathered below to mourn Miosotis Familia. The act prompted a house call from about 20 officers.
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The demonstration of contempt was spurred by the mayor’s excursion to Germany to join anti-Trump protesters at the G20 summit one day after last Wednesday’s execution of 12-year NYPD vet Familia.
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“Where are the demonstrations for the single mom who cared for her elderly mother and three children?” New York City Police Commissioner James O'Neill asked to a thunderous applause and standing ovation. “There is anger and sorrow, but why is there no outrage?”
Read More →An eight-foot cross rests on its side, near an assortment of other crosses and a collection of police uniform patches. Close by are rain-curled posters and hundreds of artificial flowers. “Back the blue,” reads one sign, not far from where stuffed animals sit on a library shelf that once held true crime books.
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