Hundreds mourn 3 slain officers


PITTSBURGH (AP) — Law enforcement officials from as far away as Georgia and Boston gathered Wednesday to pay tribute to three fellow officers killed in the line of duty over the weekend.

Allegheny County police officers led three riderless horses to Pittsburgh’s City-County Building, where hundreds of mourners from the region and a host of police and correction officials visited the bodies of Eric Kelly, Stephen Mayhle and Paul Sciullo II.

The officers were shot to death Saturday morning while responding to an argument between a mother and her 22-year-old son, who is jailed on homicide charges.

R. Joseph Mason, a motor officer patrolman in Cobb County, Ga., north of Atlanta, drove up in a rental van with five fellow officers.

“We just don’t wear uniforms in Cobb County. We wear them all over the country,” he said. “And we wear the same uniforms. The band of brothers, the color blue sticks together.”

Sgt. Joe Teahan, of the Boston Police Department, was one of 75 Boston officers and 25 from surrounding departments who will attend today’s memorial service. He said police officers are “pretty much a fraternity throughout the country.”

“We’re showing them that we got their backs,” he said. “I think the families see the support from the number of guys here to let them know they’re not alone. They know there are other guys out there, much like their husbands or fathers. ... We care.”

Jane Bean, a retired counselor for the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, made the trip from the suburb of South Park to pay her respects to the fallen officers. Her daughter and son-in-law are police officers in suburban Pittsburgh departments.

“You just admire and honor what they do,” Bean said as she fought back tears. “It’s times like this you realize how important they are.”

Police say Richard Poplawski shot the officers when they arrived at his mother’s house Saturday morning after she called 911 to ask them to remove him.

When officers arrived, Margaret Poplawski opened the door for them. She later told police that she didn’t know that her son was standing behind her with a gun.

Sciullo was shot in the home and Mayhle on the front stoop. Both men were dead within seconds. Kelly was shot as he arrived to provide backup, prompting a four-hour siege and gunbattle with police, authorities said.

Another officer, Timothy McManaway, was shot in the hand, and a fifth broke his leg on a fence.