Albany Times Union

Trump, at slain officer’s wake, pushes campaign message

- By Michael Gold THE NEW YORK TIMES

MASSAPEQUA PARK — As hundreds of police officers and family members stood outside a Long Island funeral home, former President Donald Trump on Thursday attended the wake of a New York City police officer who was killed in the line of duty days earlier.

Then, Trump, who is facing four criminal cases, including one in Manhattan that is going to trial in less than three weeks, stood in front of more than a dozen police officers and proclaimed the need for the country to “get back to law and order.”

Trump’s visit with the family of police Officer Jonathan Diller, who was fatally shot during a traffic stop Monday, was not a campaign event, although he did take the opportunit­y to emphasize his message on crime. He was greeted by New York City’s police commission­er, and then spent about 30 minutes inside the funeral home with Diller’s family, including his widow and 1year-old son.

Afterward, as rain poured down outside, Trump said the officer’s death was a horrible tragedy and, as he often does on the campaign trail, broadly called for a crackdown on violent crime without mentioning specific policies. “The only thing we can say is maybe something is going to be learned,” Trump said. “We’ve got to toughen it up. We’ve got to strengthen it up.”

But the former president’s attendance at the wake was reflective of a balancing act that has come to define his campaign. Even as Trump faces 88 felony charges, he has continued to court police officers and style himself as a tough-on-crime candidate in stark contrast to Democrats whose policies he says encourage violence.

While a somber Trump did not engage in the finger-pointing typical of his appearance­s on the trail, his top campaign aides and allies emphasized a contrast between his visit to New York with another being made Thursday by President Joe Biden for a campaign fundraisin­g event with former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.

“President Trump will be honoring the legacy of Officer Diller,” Steven Cheung, a campaign spokespers­on, said on social media. He added, “Meanwhile, the Three Stooges — Biden, Obama, and Clinton — will be at a glitzy fundraiser in the city with their elitist, outof-touch celebrity benefactor­s.”

Mayor Eric Adams of New York, who attended the wake after Trump, told reporters earlier Thursday that Biden had called him to offer condolence­s that Adams said he would relay to the family. The White House told reporters that Biden had also offered the city and its Police Department his support.

Since his first presidenti­al campaign, Trump has portrayed himself as a “law and order” candidate, stoking fears about violent crime and then promoting his unwavering support for the police and their efforts to tackle it.

Even as he contends with his criminal cases, he has made unqualifie­d support of rank-and-file officers a central part of his bid to reclaim the White House.

Before Trump spoke to reporters, a line of police officers, some uniformed and some in tactical gear, were deliberate­ly posed behind him. The former president often takes pictures with the police who

accompany his motorcade on the campaign trail, and his aides regularly share videos of the interactio­ns on social media to highlight the officers’ support.

At the same time, Trump routinely blasts liberal prosecutor­s and Democratic mayors for being ineffectiv­e at addressing violent crime, depicting their cities as lawless and dangerous. Such attacks have been politicall­y successful on Long Island, where they helped Republican­s make gains in the 2022 midterms.

Trump has focused particular ire on New York’s district attorney, who is prosecutin­g the former president on charges that he falsified business records

to cover up hushmoney payments to a porn star during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. Jury selection in the case is set to begin April 15.

Across the street from the funeral home, many onlookers straining for a glimpse of Trump voiced anger at progressiv­e policies that they said they believed had led to an increase in crime in the country, even as data has shown crime declining across the United States.

They pointed to the man accused in Diller’s killing, Guy Rivera, 34, who was arrested on a gun charge last year and had at least 21 prior arrests. Rivera was charged Thursday with first-degree murder in the shooting.

Deborah Geis, a retired police officer from Massapequa, New York, said Diller was “senselessl­y killed by a man who should’ve been in jail.”

Trump did not elaborate on specific policies he would enact to prevent deaths like Diller’s. He has previously swatted down calls for police reform, arguing that it would keep officers from properly fighting crime. On the campaign trail last year, he said shoplifter­s should be shot.

As part of his stump speech, Trump also vows to help police officers act more freely by indemnifyi­ng them from the financial consequenc­es of lawsuits accusing them of misconduct, legal protection­s that they largely already possess.

Yet even as Trump proclaims his allegiance to police officers, he has recently voiced support for those imprisoned in connection with their roles during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, when a mob of his supporters, motivated by his lies about the 2020 election, stormed past police barricades.

Some of those supporters were convicted of brutally attacking local and Capitol Police officers.

 ?? Dave Sanders/the New York Times ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks to the press outside a wake for Jonathan Diller, a slain NYPD officer, at a funeral home chapel in Massapequa on Thursday.
Dave Sanders/the New York Times Former President Donald Trump speaks to the press outside a wake for Jonathan Diller, a slain NYPD officer, at a funeral home chapel in Massapequa on Thursday.

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