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Opinion

OPINION | MAUREEN DOWD: Remember a good officer

Maureen Dowd The New York Times

We don’t hear much about good officers these days.

Their stories get lost amid the episodes of trigger-happy, racist and sadistic officers.

The good ones get tarred with the same brush, even though the last person who wants to get in a squad car with a bad officer is a good one.

It takes a catastrophe, such as 9/11; an attempted coup such as on Jan. 6, 2021; or a heartbreaking funeral with a sea of blue, such as Friday’s ceremony at St. Patrick’s Cathedral for the murdered 22-year-old New York City police officer Jason Rivera, to remind us that we should be proud of good officers even as we root out bad ones.

“There shouldn’t have to be a funeral to acknowledge how valiant they can be in the face of danger,” Chuck Wexler of the Police Executive Research Forum said.

My heart aches for the families of good officers whenever I see anti-police graffiti scrawled across urban landscapes.

Growing up, I went through another period, in the ’60s, when it wasn’t cool to be proud of anyone in uniform and when graffiti about “pigs” was common.

When you’re related to a police officer, there’s always a hum in your brain, one you try to block out but never can, that when they leave in the morning, they might not come home.

My mom was terrified that my dad, a police inspector in charge of Senate security, was not coming back on March 1, 1954, the day four Puerto Rican nationalists pulled out guns and sprayed bullets from the spectators gallery above the House floor. Five representatives were wounded. My father ran over from the Senate and wrested a 38-caliber pistol from one of the shooters.

My brother Kevin, then in second grade, was traumatized by my mom’s terror as she stood in the kitchen, frozen, before she got word that my dad was OK. “Your father is in a shooting,” she told Kevin.

I thought about this listening to Dominique Luzuriaga, Rivera’s widow, give a eulogy through sobs.

“You know, it’s hard being a cop’s wife sometimes,” she said. They had a fight the day he died. She didn’t want him to be on the phone for work so much. But he was excited to be a police officer, so excited that on his first day at the station in Harlem, he double parked in front and caused a traffic jam.

He epitomized what we want in an officer — full of compassion and joy, with an infectious smile. His older brother, Jeffrey, remembered Tata, as the family called Rivera, stripping down to his tighty-whities as a child to do Latin dances.

Rivera was the mirror opposite of Derek Chauvin, the officer convicted in the death of George Floyd. As Jeffrey recalled, “My brother was afraid of heights, he was afraid of rats, he was afraid of dogs.” But he “was not afraid to die to wear that uniform.”

Rivera and his 27-year-old partner, Wilbert Mora, died answering a 911 call from a mother in Harlem who said her son had verbally threatened her. They walked down a hall in the apartment and the son jumped out and opened fire, fatally wounding both officers.

In a letter to his commanding officer in 2020 titled “Why I Became a Police Officer,” Rivera said the relationship with the police in the neighborhood he grew up in, Inwood, on the northern tip of Manhattan, “was not great.”

“I remember one day, when I witnessed my brother being stopped and frisked,” he wrote. “I asked myself, why are we being pulled over if we are in a taxi?” The incident bothered him. But when he saw the force changing and trying to reach out to the community, he wanted in. Writing about “this chaotic city,” he said that “something as small as helping a tourist with directions, or helping a couple resolve an issue, will put a smile on someone’s face.”

He loved police shows and food, and he loved his wife. He was the class clown, but he got a serious crush on Dominique in grade school. Teachers had to sit them apart so they could focus.

When she complained that fateful day and they bickered, he offered to give her a lift and said to her, “It might be the last ride I give you.”

“I said, ‘No,'” she recalled, and fetched an Uber instead. “And that was probably the biggest mistake I ever made.”

She said that when she was called to Harlem Hospital, “Walking up those steps, seeing everybody staring at me, was the scariest moment I’ve experienced.”

Standing by her dead husband, wrapped in sheets, she told him: “Wake up, baby. I’m here.”

In the eulogy, she often talked directly to her husband, as if he were standing at her side: “The little bit of hope I had that you would come back to life just to say ‘Goodbye’ or just to say ‘I love you’ one more time had left. I was lost. I’m still lost.”

When they wheeled Rivera out of the hospital in the freezing cold, to be placed in an ambulance to go to the morgue, his body was draped in an NYPD flag and police officers were standing vigilantly, silently. The only sound was a police helicopter whirring overhead. Officers there said they were stunned when the eerie silence was broken by the wailing of Rivera’s mother.

“My boy, my little boy, come home to us, my little boy,” she keened over the body. Tough officers dropped their heads, their faces wet with tears.

Maureen Dowd writes for The New York Times.