
‘America's cop' Bernie Kerik remembered as ‘raw, real' family man at NYC funeral
The former NYPD commissioner was eulogized by his son, Joey Kerik, as a steadfast family man even during his high-profile career leading the city's police department through the terror attacks.
'He was raw, real, everything you'd want in a dad,' Joey said, speaking to pews packed with the Big Apple's top leaders.
4 Dignitaries including Mayor Eric Adams attend Friday's funeral for former NYPD Commissioner Bernie Kerik at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan.
GC Images
'As a man in the limelight, there's nothing he loved more than his children,' Joey said.
But Kerik also put 'his whole heart' into his demanding job, facing the struggles of his role head-on both during Sept. 11, 2001, and in post-terror attack New York City, the son said.
'He took command, didn't flinch or retreat,' said Joey, 41, who followed in his father's footsteps into law enforcement and currently serves on the Newark SWAT team.
'He always told me how proud he was of me. The one thing I never got to say to him was how proud I was of him,' the son said.
Dozens of dignitaries were in attendance to honor the life of Kerik, who died Thursday after he was hospitalized with cardiac disease. He was 69.
FBI Director Kash Patel and his wife were among the mourners, as was former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who named Kerik to the top cop job in 2000, and his son, Andrew. Giuliani was seen rubbing elbows with Kerik's successor, former top city cop Ray Kelly.
Mayor Eric Adams and NYPD Commissioner Jennifer Tisch were among those lined up in front of flag-bearers before Kerik's coffin was brought into the church. Deputy Mayor Randy Maestro and Deputy NYPD Commissioner Tania Kinsella joined the crowd, too.
4 Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, whom Kerik served under as NYPD commish, attends the funeral with his son Andrew.
GC Images
4 Kerik died Thursday after he was hospitalized with cardiac disease. He was 69.
AFP via Getty Images
'The quote, 'Courage is an uncommon virtue,' applies today as we commemorate D-Day and celebrate the life of Commissioner Bernard Kerik, the man whose courage saved lives, delivered a city from its worst attack and helped elect the man who is saving America, President Trump,' Giuliani wrote on X on Friday.
4 FBI Director Kash Patel lines up ahead of the flag-bearers for the service.
GC Images
A procession to the famed cathedral before the ceremony included motorcycles, a marching band and dozens of NYPD officers.
Kerik had a storied career that earned him the nickname the 'Beat Cop Commissioner' for his hands-on leadership style, making five arrests during his 16-month tenure as commissioner, including one involving two ex-convicts in Harlem driving a stolen van.
His law enforcement career spanned four decades and involved national security work and helming the NYPD during 9/11, overseeing its response, rescue, recovery and investigative efforts in the aftermath.
Kerik is survived by his wife, Hala Matil Kerik, and three children, including a son with ex-wife Jacqueline Llerena.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
FBI relocating to Ronald Reagan Building in downtown Washington, D.C
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is relocating its headquarters to the The Ronald Reagan Building, closing the storied headquarters building it has occupied since 1975, the law enforcement agency said July 1. The agency is currently housed in the J. Edgar Hoover Building in downtown Washington D.C. 'This is a historic moment for the FBI,' FBI Director Kash Patel said in a joint announcement with the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA)."Through our strong partnerships with members of Congress and GSA we are ushering FBI Headquarters into a new era and providing our agents of justice a safer place to work. Moving to the Ronald Reagan Building is the most cost effective and resource efficient way to carry out our mission." Back in May, Patel announced agency was moving its more than 1,500 personnel out of the downtown Washington D.C. building. The planned relocation from comes more than than two decades of looking for a new office and after federal officials cited an aging building, needed space to meet the agency's mission and workforce requirements. FBI's existing headquarters in the Hoover building "has accumulated years of deferred maintenance, suffering from an aging water system to concrete falling off the structure,' said GSA Acting Administrator Stephen Ehikian. 'I am proud of the GSA's commitment to working with Director Patel and his FBI team to find a building that best supports their mission and their people.' The plan headquarters the FBI inside a building once home to the U.S. Agency for International Development, the principal agency extending aid to countries recovering from disaster, which has since been dismantled by the Trump administration. The announcement did not provide a move date and USA TODAY has reached out to the FBI for comment. How many people work at Patel previously spoke about closing Hoover Building and transforming it into some type of a 'deep state' museum. In May, Patel said the FBI had about 11,000 of its 38,000 or so staff in the National Capital Region, a 50-mile radius around Washington, D.C. 'It's like a third of the workforce. A third of the crime doesn't happen here. So we're taking 1,500 of those folks and moving them out,' Patel said this spring. Where is the FBI headquarters? The FBI's headquarters is currently housed in the Hoover Building in Washington, D.C. at 935 Pennsylvania Avenue NW. The Reagan Building complex, at 1300 Pennsylvania Ave NW, is currently home to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and other tenants. "The GSA will continue to support and work with CBP on space that allows them to fulfill their mission while the transition of the FBI to the Reagan Building commences," the FBI and GSA wrote in the announcement. 'A world-class location' GSA Public Buildings Service Commissioner Michael Peters said the move provides "a world-class location for the FBI's public servants, but it also saves Americans billions of dollars on new construction and avoids more than $300 million in deferred maintenance costs at the J. Edgar Hoover facility.' Contributing: USA TODAY's Josh Meyer Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@ and follow her on X @nataliealund.


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
US Ally Detects Chinese Military Near Coast: Photos
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Chinese military has deployed a spy ship, a patrol aircraft and drones in waters around Japan's southwestern islands in recent days, according to the United States ally. Newsweek has contacted the Chinese Defense Ministry for comment via email. Why It Matters Japan forms part of the so-called First Island Chain—a Western Pacific defensive line—alongside Taiwan and the Philippines, under a U.S. containment strategy that aims to limit China's military activities within its surrounding airspace and waters in the event of war. Meanwhile, China has been expanding its military reach and presence both within and beyond the First Island Chain, including through its recently concluded simultaneous deployments of two aircraft carriers in the Philippine Sea—located on the eastern side of the First Island Chain. What To Know A Chinese intelligence-gathering vessel was spotted passing through the Miyako Strait—which lies between the islands of Okinawa and Miyako in Japan's southwestern waters—en route from the East China Sea to the Philippine Sea on Saturday, according to Japan's Defense Ministry. The Type 815A spy ship has been identified as CNS Yuhengxing by its hull number 798. It remains unclear whether it was deployed to monitor the U.S. aircraft carrier USS George Washington, which was seen underway in nearby waters of the Philippine Sea on Monday. While the U.S. aircraft carrier was operating in the area, the Chinese military on Monday deployed a Y-9 patrol plane and a BZK-005 reconnaissance drone to the Miyako Strait. Both aircraft flew over waters south of Japan's southwestern islands before returning to China. A pair of Chinese drones—whose types were not identified by Japan's Defense Ministry—were tracked flying over the East China Sea two days later. They transited between Taiwan and Japan's Yonaguni Island as they headed southward off the eastern coast of Taiwan. The Chinese Type 815A spy ship CNS Yuhengxing, top, and a Chinese Y-9 patrol plane, bottom, transit the Miyako Strait on June 28 and 30, 2025, respectively. The Chinese Type 815A spy ship CNS Yuhengxing, top, and a Chinese Y-9 patrol plane, bottom, transit the Miyako Strait on June 28 and 30, 2025, respectively. Japan's Defense Ministry A map provided by Japan's Defense Ministry indicates that one of the Chinese military drones returned to China via the so-called Yonaguni Gap—a waterway less than 70 miles wide that separates Taiwan's east coast from Japan's westernmost island of Yonaguni. However, the second Chinese drone continued its southward flight on Wednesday until it exited the Japanese military's monitoring zone. It is unclear whether the drone returned to China by flying over waters between southern Taiwan and the northern Philippines. Japan scrambled fighter jets on both Monday and Wednesday in response to Chinese aerial activities near the nation's airspace, the Japanese Defense Ministry said in its press releases. What People Are Saying Japan's defense white paper in 2024 read: "China has been rapidly building up military capabilities while intensifying its activities in the East China Sea, where the waters surrounding the Senkaku Islands are, as well as in the Pacific." The Senkaku Islands are an uninhabited islet group in the East China Sea, ruled by Japan but claimed by China and Taiwan as the Diaoyu Islands and the Diaoyutai Islands, respectively. Senior Colonel Zhang Xiaogang, spokesperson for China's Defense Ministry, said in April: "The Chinese military's operations in relevant waters and airspace are in line with international law and practices, and do not target any specific entity. They are aimed at enhancing our capability to safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests." What Happens Next China is likely to continue flexing its military power by deploying aircraft and ships across the Western Pacific, a move seen as challenging U.S. military dominance in the region.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Oregon lawmakers regulate guns, public defense, while crime victim, exoneree funding stall
Bills meant to reform and direct more money to the state's criminal justice system had a mixed bag this 2025 Legislative Session. (Photo by Ron Cooper/Oregon Capital Chronicle) Bills meant to reform and direct more money to the state's criminal justice system had some major wins and some major losses during the 2025 Legislative Session. Much needed funding for public defense lawyers, new gun control measures and new civil liberties protections overcame budgetary challenges and some strong opposition, while efforts to ensure financial compensation for victims of crime, and those who say they've been wrongfully incarcerated, remain in limbo. Addressing the state's ongoing public defender shortage was among the most pressing issues for lawmakers during the six-month session. The matter reached a fever-pitch in April, when Gov. Tina Kotek fired and replaced the head of the Oregon Public Defense Commission, calling it 'unacceptable' for thousands of Oregonians to go through the justice system without a lawyer. Under House Bill 2614, she will be allowed to fire the commission's executive director for 'just cause.' Lawmakers sought to expand the capacity for experienced lawyers' to take on cases by allocating in House Bill 5031 a nearly 15% funding increase to the commission's more than $700 million budget. But missing is more money to be used directly to support hiring more trial attorneys statewide, as Kotek requested in June. Perhaps the biggest blow to justice reform advocates was the failure of lawmakers to pass Senate Bill 1007, which would have streamlined the payout process to Oregonians found innocent after being wrongfully convicted and serving time in prison. The bill's passage would've likely called into question the state's handling of dozens of cases, and its failure 'only further harms exonerees and their families,' according to Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Gun control also rose to the top of Democrats' agenda by the end of the session. They passed Senate Bill 243, banning bump stocks and rapid-fire devices, and allowing local governments to ban the concealed carry of guns in public buildings. But, House Bill 2076, seeking to create a statewide gun licensing program, died in the House Revenue Committee in the face of staunch Republican opposition during the last week of the session. A bill to increase pay for state judges — House Bill 2712 — passed, but another — House Bill 2469 — that would have given them more discretion to lower penalties for some minor offenses, turning some misdemeanor crimes instead into 'violations,' failed. Oregonians who plead guilty to crimes on the grounds of insanity will navigate new legal guidelines under House Bill 2471, which clarifies circumstances under which a mental disorder can be used to absolve a defendant of full responsibility for committing a crime. District attorneys advocating for the bill argued that the clarity is needed in the wake of ongoing legal debates around using insanity pleas. The safety of public officials gained urgency in the wake of the fatal shootings of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark Hortman at their home June 16, and the near-fatal shootings of Minnesota State Senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette Hoffman, at their home the same morning. A day before the politically-motivated attack by 57-year-old Vance Boelter, Oregon lawmakers voted in favor of a bill that would conceal their home addresses from the public, as well as other candidates for office, Senate Bill 224. Another bill that would have made it an official crime to threaten a public official, Senate Bill 473, passed in the Oregon Senate but did not make it through the House. The Oregon Legislature passed several bills meant to offer justice to victims of abuse and sexual assault. Senate Bill 180 confers greater protections from defamation lawsuits for victims of sexual assault. Advocates say such suits can have a chilling effect on victims' willingness to bring criminal charges against perpetrators. House Bill 2975 restores courts' ability to impose distinct sentences for acts of violence like assault and strangulation that have been committed in the context of domestic violence. But when it comes to funding agencies that work with sexual assault victims, lawmakers came up short. House Bill 3196 would have allocated $18.5 million to the Oregon Department of Justice for awarding grants to nonprofits that help victims of abuse find safety and access shelters. House Bill 3070 would have allocated an additional $400,000 for the Attorney General's Sexual Assault Task Force, which certifies sexual assault nurse examiners. Neither effort advanced out of the powerful budgeting Joint Committee on Ways and Means. The act of doxxing has now become a misdemeanor under Senate Bill 1121, building on a previous law that empowered victims to sue. It is also now a misdemeanor to distribute AI-generated nude images under House Bill 2299, which prohibits sharing such images. To curb illicit sex trafficking in spas and massage parlors in the state, Kotek signed House Bill 3819 which raises fines for operating facilities that violate state trafficking laws, and allows the State Board of Massage Therapists to post signs on businesses that violate such laws. But in amendments, the bill was scrubbed of language empowering district attorneys to prosecute businesses based on testimony from victimized women who grow reluctant to share that testimony in court later on, a change that critics worry gives the law now less teeth. A bill conferring new rights for foster kids — Senate Bill 875 — hit unexpected speedbumps when Kotek vetoed it after raising concerns that the bill did not clearly define perpetrators, abuse and the definition of custody and a child in care of the state. The bill would have required a court order from a foster parent seeking to block or limit contact among foster children and their siblings, and provided kids in the foster care system with a public attorney. The bill also guaranteed them access to personal belongings when being moved between new foster placements, and required they be given appropriate luggage to carry their belongings. The Senate moved to override Kotek's veto of the bill, but the House opted to concur with Kotek after she raised concerns about the bill's specificity. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE