Published 22:55 IST, July 3rd 2019
NYPD detective Luis Alvarez receives a hero's funeral
Former New York Police Detective Luis Alvarez who fought for the extension of health benefits for September 11 responders was hailed as a hero Wednesday at his funeral.
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Former New York Police Detective Luis Alvarez who fought for the extension of health benefits for September 11 responders was hailed as a hero Wednesday at his funeral.
Police Commissioner James O'Neil addressing the people said:
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"These heroes responded to calls for help. They did not hesitate; that's who they were and still are. He and they viewed their efforts as an obligation that they promised long ago to the people we serve."
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Here's a tweet by Commissioner O'Neill:
The loss was personal for many other mourners. Alvarez's son David said:
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"Before he became an American hero, he was mine,"
Alvarez died on Saturday in a hospice center after a three-year battle with colorectal cancer. He attributed his illness to the three months he spent digging through rubble at the World Trade Center's twin towers after the terrorist attack. In June, a frail Alvarez appeared before the House Judiciary Committee with former "Daily Show" host Jon Stewart to request the extension of the Sept. 11 Victim Compensation Fund, which has been exhausted over time.
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"I did not want to be anywhere else but ground zero when I was there," Alvarez said at the hearing. "Now the 9/11 illnesses have taken many of us, and we are all worried about our children, our spouses and our families and what happens if we are not here."
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Alvarez's survivors include his parents, wife, three sons and three siblings.
"He told me he had been walking, and walking, and walking," his sister Aida Lugo recounted Alvarez as saying the night before he died.
"He wanted to sit in the chair," she added
When asked where he had been walking, she said,
"My brother responded, 'I was walking to find first responders to make sure they get help. How we walk with the broken speaks louder than how we sit with the greatest,"
Lugo asserted Fighting for other first responders through the Victim Compensation Fund became his dying wish. After Alvarez and Stewart's emotional testimony before Congress, the House Judiciary Committee voted in support of a bill that would extend funding through the fiscal year 2090. Lugo said her brother was grateful to hear of the committee's support. The bill awaits a full House vote. Alvarez was born in Havana and raised in the New York City borough of Queens. He served in the Marines before joining the New York Police Department in 1990 and spent time in the narcotics division and the bomb squad. In a statement after his death, Alvarez's family called him its "warrior" and told people to remember his words: "'Please take care of yourselves and each other." NYPD Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea tweeted that Alvarez was "an inspiration, a warrior, a friend."
22:02 IST, July 3rd 2019