Trump Ramps Up Steel Tariffs After Promise in Pittsburgh
This Comedian Pointed out the 'Craziest Narrative' About the 2024 Election
Ted Cruz Roasts Senator 'Spartacus' During Fiery Exchange About Threats to Judges
CNN Fires Reporter Behind Defamation Report
Federal Court Halts Trump Restrictions on Transgender Inmates
Why People Are Upset Over AOC's Response to the Horrific Boulder Terrorist Attack
NRCC Torches House Dems Over Boulder Terror Attack: Rivet, Landsman Slammed for Radical...
CEO of Health Care Software Company Convicted in $1 Billion Medicare Fraud Scheme
'Lamest Opposition in America': JD Vance Responds to Democrats Trying to Troll Trump...
Male Student 'Switches Gender' During School Day To Watch Girls Change in Locker...
FBI Uncovers Chinese Biopathogen Smuggling Plot at University of Michigan
Californians Eye Kamala Harris 2028 Rumors with Shrugs, Sighs, and Skepticism
Party's Over: Nightclub Full of Illegal Immigrants in South Carolina Raided
WH Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt Calls Out BBC for Libelous Claim About IDF...
First Round of DOGE Cuts Headed to Capitol Hill
Tipsheet

Kathy Hochul Showed Up to Slain NYPD Officer's Wake for a 10 Minute Photo-Op Before Leaving

AP Photo/Hans Pennink

Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-NY) left the wake of slain New York Police Department officer Jonathan Diller after only ten minutes on Friday. 

Hochul showed up at the Massapequa Funeral Home on Long Island around 1:45 p.m. for the second day of viewing. However, she abruptly left after making a photo-op-esque appearance. 

Advertisement

While she headed toward her waiting car, a man appeared to yell at Hochul, confronting her while several cops standing nearby were seen applauding him. 

“[It looked] like she was telling [Hochul] off,” an onlooker told the New York Post of the exchange. “It didn’t look like the widow had a kind word to say.”

The governor and several other New York Democratic lawmakers have been accused of having blood on their hands following Diller’s death after one of the men charged in the shooting was released from jail in April 2023 on gun charges. 

The Sergeants Benevolent Association President Vincent Vallelong warned the city’s leaders to not attend Diller’s funeral, saying that they should feel “morally responsible” for his death. 

“Their presence is more than a distraction. It is a stain on the legacy of a true hero who made the ultimate sacrifice,” Vallelong wrote in a letter. 

Diller was shot and killed in the line of duty while conducting a routine traffic stop earlier this week. A stray bullet hit him after he and another officer stopped a vehicle that was illegally parked at a bus stop, according to police enforcement. 

Advertisement

The suspect accused of firing the shots has been in and out of prison for related charges. 

“I’m sure that many elected officials will attend PO Diller’s funeral, shed a few crocodile tears, and prominently seat themselves for a good photo opportunity. The sad reality is we don’t want them there,” Vallelong continued in his letter. 

Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (R-NY) blamed the liberal city’s cashless bail and criminal justice reform that has increased crime and has led to innocent people being killed. 

“I’m angry that this continuing revolving door of criminal justice is allowing people to be hurt,” he said. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement