NEW YORK—For the second time in two weeks Fifth Avenue in Manhattan fell silent as pallbearers carried a flag-draped casket up the steps of St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic Cathedral on Feb. 1.
This time was for the wake of police officer Wilbert Mora, the second of two policemen shot and killed in the line of duty.
Once again a musician played on a single bagpipe and a color guard stood nearby.
Firefighters and EMS personnel from the FDNY were present as well New York State troopers.
The wake came two days after a nor’easter socked the Northeast with heavy snow, yet Fifth Avenue was clear for vehicles and pedestrians. The temperature was slightly higher than last week with lower winds.
Mora and fellow officer Rivera were shot on Jan. 21 while responding to a domestic dispute involving a mother and her son in the Harlem section of Manhattan.
Rivera died on the night of the shooting.
Mora, 27, succumbed to his wounds on Jan. 25.
On Twitter, the NYPD posted, “In his final act of service, Officer Wilbert Mora saved the lives of five people thanks to his organ donation.”
In addition to the shooting deaths of Rivera and Mora, another NYPD officer was shot on Jan. 20.
Det. Dominick Libretti was wounded while conducting a narcotics search warrant on Staten Island.
A perpetrator opened fire on Libretti and other narcotics officers, striking Libretti in the leg. They returned fire.
“Even with a serious leg wound, bleeding badly enough that fellow officers had to apply immediate pressure to slow the blood loss, he held a ballistic shield in front of his team to protect them from gunfire,” said Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell, in a press conference later that day.
Libretti was released from Staten Island Hospital on Jan. 31.
In the first 20 days of 2022, three NYPD officers were shot.
Mora’s funeral will be held there on Feb. 2.