By Associated Press - Saturday, December 27, 2014

NEW YORK — Hundreds of officers outside the church where a funeral is being held for a policeman killed along with his partner in an ambush shooting turned their backs on the mayor as he spoke during Saturday’s service.

The reaction from officers watching Officer Rafael Ramos’ funeral on giant TV screens outside the church follows comments from police union officials who said Mayor Bill de Blasio contributed to a climate of mistrust toward police amid anti-police protests.

Inside Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens , however, mourners gave de Blasio polite applause before and after his speech.

The mayor said hearts citywide were aching after the shootings that left Ramos and his partner dead.

Police union officials have said de Blasio contributed to a climate of mistrust toward police amid protests over the police deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner on Staten Island. At a hospital after the Dec. 20 shooting, the police union’s president, Patrick Lynch, and others turned their backs on the mayor in a sign of disrespect. Lynch blamed the mayor then for the officers’ deaths and said he had blood on his hands.

Weeks before the shooting, Lynch suggested that officers sign a petition requesting that the mayor not attend their funerals were they to die in the line of duty.


SEE ALSO: Rafael Ramos funeral begins in New York


Cardinal Timothy Dolan and others had since tried to temper the rhetoric.

De Blasio followed Vice President Joe Biden and Gov. Andrew Cuomo on the roster of speakers eulogizing Ramos.

Officers watching the funeral service outside joined those inside in applauding when Biden called the New York Police Department the finest in the world.

“When an assassin’s bullet targeted two officers, it targeted this city and it touched the soul of an entire nation,” the vice president said.

Cuomo called the daylight shootings of the officers as they sat in their cruiser on a Brooklyn street “an attack on all of us.”

The attack shook the city and put an end to large-scale local protests criticizing police over a series of high-profile, in-custody deaths.

Funeral plans for Ramos’ partner, Officer Wenjian Liu, have yet to be announced.

When the Ramos family arrived, the eldest son — wearing his father’s NYPD jacket — was hugged by a police officer.

Ramos was described Friday during an eight-hour wake as a selfless, caring and compassionate man.

“What happened to my father was a tragedy,” Ramos’ son, Justin, said in a tearful eulogy viewed by hundreds of officers in the street who watched on giant television screens outside the crowded church. “But his death will not be in vain.”

Ramos, a 40-year-old married father of two, was studying to become a pastor and kept Bible study books in his locker, his commanding officer said.

Officer Dustin Lindaman of the Waterloo Police Department flew from Iowa to attend Ramos’ funeral.

“He’s one of our brothers, and when this happens, it affects everyone in law enforcement — it absolutely affects everyone,” he said. “We wanted to show our support.”

After the death of the officers on a street in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant section, the gunman, Ismaaiyl Brinsley killed himself. Police said he was troubled and had shot and wounded an ex-girlfriend in Baltimore earlier that day.

In online posts shortly before the attack, Brinsley referenced the killings of two unarmed black men — Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner on Staten Island — by white police officers.

De Blasio has stood firmly by the police since the shooting, calling on the demonstrators to temporarily halt their protests and praising officers after the police department announced the arrest of a seventh person since the shooting for making threats against police.

There was no noticeable reaction from police outside the church when de Blasio arrived Saturday about a half hour before services.

A block from the church, though, retired NYPD Officer John Mangan held a sign that read: “God Bless the NYPD. Dump de Blasio.”

“If the mayor really wanted to do the right thing, he would have gotten into an NYPD car and rode around Bed Stuy and see the difficult jobs these cops do every day,” Mangan said. “The bottom line is there should be more signs out here in support of these cops.”

Ramos and Liu were the first officers to die in the line of duty in New York since 2011.

They have both been posthumously promoted to first-grade detective, police said.

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