Memorial Service Honoring CMPD Officer Joshua Eyer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. β Watch the procession and memorial service for CMPD Officer Joshua Eyer.
πMemorial highlights:
πAshley Eyer (Officer Eyer’s wife) – To Joshua, thank you for giving me a beautiful life and a beautiful son, we won’t let you down. I love you so much, sunshine. I’ll see you soon.
πAshley Eyer (Officer Eyer’s wife) – I never have and never will question how much he loved me. I will carry his love for me for the rest of my life. He loved all of you too.
πAshley Eyer (Officer Eyer’s wife) – For 10 years, Josh and I built a beautiful life. He is and always will be my very best friend. He was so good to me.
πCharles Sardelli (Officer Eyer’s best friend) – Josh’s book is not finished as he is a man of faith.
πCharles Sardelli (Officer Eyer’s best friend) – We met over 15 years ago and developed a bond that would make even the Jedi jealous.
πDetective Thomas Mattox: I know Andrew, (Josh’s son), is too young to know right now but his dad died a hero.
πOfficer Nicholas Ferreira: Josh was everything I would hope to be. We have spent our entire careers together and that’s why this is so painful.
πOfficer Nicholas Ferreira: I love you Josh, and I know you are here watching over us. May you rest in peace, Brother.
πChief Johnny Jennings: Officer Eyer, you are honorable, you are noble. You may be physically gone from us but your spirit carries on in our hearts. May God bless you and keep you.
πChief Johnny Jennings: My challenge to everyone who wears this uniform, pick up the pieces that Josh leaves behind and carry them on.
πChief Johnny Jennings, speaking to Officer Eyer’s wife Ashley – “You gave me hope that we will get through this together.”
πChief Johnny Jennings: I am just going to speak from my heart. There’s no playbook for this.
πCMPD Major Brad Koch thanked nearly a dozen different departments that stepped up on April 29th to help take 911 calls in the city while CMPD were at the scene on Galway Drive.
π”He was passionate and humble. Truly a selfless person.” -Chaplain Lonnie Clouse
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) β Friends, colleagues and the wife ofΒ fallen Charlotte-MecklenburgΒ Police Officer Joshua Eyer remembered him Friday as a hard-charging outwardly stern cop who also peppered friends with βhow’s thingsβ texts and showered love on his wife and young son.
Thousands packed the sanctuary at Charlotte’s First Baptist Church for Eyer’s memorial service, badges crossed with black ribbons, as they honored the life and sacrifice of a man who would push as hard to arrest a homicide suspect as he would someone who stole a sandwich.
Eyer was killed Monday along withΒ three other officersΒ and the suspect they were trying to arrest as they tried to serve a felon possessing a gun weapon warrant in a Charlotte neighborhood. The first three officers were killed as theyΒ arrived at theΒ home. Eyer was shot as he rushed to help his fallen comrades.
βFull speed, no matter the cost. That couldn’t have been more in evidence by his actions Monday,” said Charlotte-Mecklenburg Detective Thomas Maddox who worked in Eyer’s division for five years.
Eyer’s funeral is the first of four around Charlotte after the deadliest day for U.S. law enforcement in one incident since five officers wereΒ killed by a sniperΒ during a protest in Dallas in 2016.
Also killed Monday were Sam Poloche and William Elliott of the North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections and Deputy U.S. Marshal Thomas Weeks.Β Elliott’s memorial serviceΒ is Thursday at Catawba Valley Community College in Hickory. Times for the other services have not been announced.
Eyer’s body in a flag-draped coffin was brought from police headquarters on a horse-drawn caisson three blocks to the church where the late evangelist Billy Graham held his first crusade.
Officers lined the street as dozens marched playing bagpipes and drums. Behind them were hundreds more Charlotte-Mecklenburg officers walking quietly in dress uniforms to the church where an American flag hung from the top of a firetruck’s tall ladder.
Eyer and Nicholas Ferreria went to the police academy together in 2017 and ended up in the same division.
βHomicide suspect, he would get you. Stole a sandwich from QT, he would get you,β Ferreria said, flanked on one side by a picture of Eyer in his police uniform and on the other by Eyer with his wife and nearly 3-year-old son Andrew.
Eyer’s sometimes harsh face β traffic duty infuriated him because people drove so carelessly and poorly β melted away when you got to know him better and he couldn’t hide the way he loved his wife and son, Ferreria said.
Ashley Ayer met her husband in college. She asked everyone in the pews to help her teach their son what a good man his father was.
βJoshua thank you for giving me a beautiful life and for a beautiful son. We wonβt let you down, OK? I love you so much, Sunshine. I’ll see you soon,β she said.
Detective Maddox said he’s determined to let Eyer’s son know that βhis father died a hero with a full heartβ and the rest ofΒ his familyΒ know what he meant to his friends, but also the community he served. Eyer wasn’t scheduled to work Monday, but took a few hours so he could be off for a family event later.
βMr. Eyer, I watched you Monday night look down at your son and tell him over 15 times you were proud of him as he lay there with the American flag draped across of him. I can look across this room today and say you arenβt the only one proud of your son,β Maddox said.
Charlie Sardelli, Eyer’s best friend since his ROTC days in high school, remembered how Eyer spent 10 hours moving belongings into a storage unit when the Sardelli family’s house burned down.
And whenever it seemed like too long since they had talked, Eyer texted him out of the blue βhow’s things” β even when he was deployed to Afghanistan and Kuwait during his 12 years with the North Carolina Army National Guard.
“We got to watch him change lives around the globe with nothing more than his personality,” Sardelli said.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Johnny Jennings honored Eyer as Officer of the Month for April just a few weeks before he was killed.
βOfficer Eyer, you represent everything great about this badge I wear over my heart and this patch I wear on my sleeve,β Jennings said.
Eyer’s body left the church and was taken in a slow procession of hundreds of police vehicles with their blue lights on to his final resting place at Sharon Memorial Park.