Biden awards Medal of Valor to 9 recipients, including posthumously to 2 slain NYPD officers

President Biden applauded "true heroism" in awarding the Medal of Valor to nine recipients for 2021-2022, including two slain NYPD officers.

President Biden on Wednesday awarded the Medal of Valor, the highest award the U.S. can bestow on a public safety officer, to nine recipients for 2021 and 2022, including posthumously to two NYPD officers shot and killed in the line of duty while responding to a 911 call. 

"There's no greater responsibility of government than assure the safety of the American people and those who serve and protect us all. We're incredibly proud of all of you. And I mean that, incredibly proud, all of you. And we're going to have your back as long as we need to. As long as you're engaged," Biden said in the East Room of the White House. 

In the past two weeks, the president noted how the country observed a National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Weekend, National Police Weekend, and National Peace Officers' Memorial Day. Biden said he has hosted the Medal of Valor event several times as president and vice president and co-sponsored the bill that created the Medal of Valor when he was a U.S. senator. 

"These are some most meaningful things that I do as president, because knowing you, meeting your families, looking in your eyes, seeing your courage gives me so much hope for the country." Biden, who recently announced he'd seek re-election in 2024, said. "You represent – this is not hyperbole – represent the very best of us. You represent the best of who we are as Americans. God bless you all. May God protect public safety officers and families."

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Two recipients honored posthumously were NYPD officer Wilbert Mora and his police partner Jason Rivera, who were shot Jan. 21, 2022, while responding to a call about a family dispute in a Harlem apartment. A third officer at the scene, Sumit Sulan, shot and killed the gunman, identified as Lashawn J. McNeil, ending the deadly encounter moments after it began. 

The NYPD said McNeil had been on probation for a 2003 felony narcotics conviction in New York City and had an extensive criminal record. Rivera died that night, Mora was pronounced dead four days later. The families of the two officers accepted their awards Wednesday, while Sulan himself also received a Medal of Valor from Biden. 

The funerals for Mora and Rivera drew a sea of blue mourners who demanded Democratic Mayor Eric Adams, a former police officer himself who had newly taken office at the time, address surging violent crime in the Big Apple since 2020. 

Rivera, 22, had been a police officer for barely a year. Mora, 27, was in his fourth year on the job. All three were promoted to detective – the fallen officers posthumously and Sulan in a ceremony where he was given detective shield No. 332, a symbol of the three from the 32nd precinct where they worked in Manhattan.

The other Medal of Valor recipients awarded Wednesday were Lt. Jason Hickey, Lt. Justin Hespeler and Firefighter Patrick Thornton, all of the New York City Fire Department; as well as Cpl. Jeffrey Farmer, of the Littletown, Colorado, Police Department; Deputy Bobby Pham of the Clermont County Sheriff's Office in Ohio, and Sgt. Kendrick Simpo of the Houston, Texas, Police Department.

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Hespeler, who's served on the FDNY for more than 17 years, rescued a 5-month-old baby from a house fire in Brooklyn. 

"That’s true heroism," Biden said.

Thornton, aboard an FDNY boat, saved a man trapped under a capsized vessel in the waters off the coast of Staten Island. Hickey was on the FDNY's marine training unit when he got a distress call of a man in the Harlem River, a tidal strait that flows swiftly between the Hudson and East Rivers. He jumped in and saved the man from drowning.

Farmer was responding to a call of shots fired possibly out of a car window, and chased the suspect to the door of an apartment, where the man opened fire, hitting Farmer's partner. Farmer worked to fend off the shooter, then, realizing an ambulance was too far away, dragged his partner into his police car and drove him to the hospital himself, saving his life.

Pham saved a drowning woman who had driven her car into a lake, though he could not swim.

Simpo was working a second job at the Houston area Galleria mall when he heard on the radio a heavily armed man wearing a black mask was roaming the mall, near a group of children gathered for a dance competition. Simpo tackled the suspect, who was carrying an AR-15 rifle, handgun and 120 rounds of ammunition. No one was injured.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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