Hundreds pay tribute to slain CPD Officer Enrique Martinez. 'He was a beautiful person'

Officer Enrique Martinez was shot to death on the job Nov. 4 in Chatham. Mourners were asked to remember Martinez as more than a police officer. A former official said it was also important to think of the trauma of officers who were with Martinez when he was killed.

VISITATION-111824-14.jpgMourners lined up around the corner for the visitation for slain Chicago police officer Enrique Martinez at Blake-Lamb Funeral Home in Oak Lawn on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024.

Mourners attend a visitation for slain Chicago police Officer Enrique Martinez at Blake-Lamb Funeral Home in Oak Lawn on Sunday. Martinez’s funeral will be held Monday at 10 a.m. at St. Rita of Cascia Catholic Church in Ashburn.

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

Hundreds of mourners streamed into Blake-Lamb Funeral Home on Sunday in suburban Oak Lawn to pay their respects to slain Chicago Police Officer Enrique Martinez.

The visitation service drew law enforcement officials from across the country, including officers from Fort Worth, Texas; New York City; and Minneapolis. A massive American flag hung from the ladder of a Chicago Fire Department truck in front of the funeral home.

Maria Marmolejo, chairwoman of CPD Gold Star Families, said she spoke with Martinez’s family during the service, and they want people to remember that the 26-year-old was more than just a police officer.

“He had a whole life to live, and it was cut very short,” Marmolejo told reporters outside the funeral home. “There are things that we really need to remember and honor. He was a human being, he was a great person, he was fun, he was a great gift-giver, he was a beautiful person. Let’s remember him that way.”

Marmolejo knows what the family is going through. She is the widow of CPD Officer Eduardo Marmolejo, who was killed in 2018.

Brenda Valadez, whose brother, CPD Officer Alejandro Valadez, was killed in 2009, said it’s important to show the family support because they will never be the same.

VISITATION-111824-02.jpgA police officer waits to cross the street for the visitation for slain Chicago police officer Enrique Martinez at Blake-Lamb Funeral Home in Oak Lawn on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024. | Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

A police officer stands under a flag honoring Officer Enrique Martinez outside Blake-Lamb Funeral Home in Oak Lawn. Martinez’s family asked that he be remembered as a great person and great gift-giver.

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

“When we went through a terrible time we didn’t want anyone else to go through the same thing,” Valadez said in Spanish. “To know that the family is destroyed, their lives will never be what they were, is the hardest part. This keeps happening, and we hope there’s a time when we don’t have to be standing out here going through this again.”

Martinez was shot to death Nov. 4 during a traffic stop in Chatham. He was a month shy of completing three years as a police officer.

Darion McMillian, 23, of Harvey, appeared in court earlier this month on charges of first-degree murder in the shooting that also killed his friend in the 8000 block of South Ingleside Avenue. McMillian used a handgun equipped with an extended magazine and modified with a switch to fire automatically, police and prosecutors said.

John Catanzara, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, lamented that a young officer with a bright future was killed while trying to do his job.

“Yet another young officer lost far too soon who was trying to do right by this city and its citizens,” Catanzara said. “Unfortunately, he paid for it with his life.”

VISITATION-111824-05.jpgRetired Chicago Police Chief of Detectives Eugene Roy spoke to media outside of the visitation for slain Chicago police officer Enrique Martinez at Blake-Lamb Funeral Home in Oak Lawn on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024.

Retired Chicago Police Chief of Detectives Eugene Roy calls on the community to remember the trauma that Officer Enrique Martinez’s colleagues who were with him when he was killed are going through. “These officers watched their friend, their colleague die in front of them. They’re scarred for life.”

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times

Eugene Roy, a former CPD chief of detectives, said it’s also important to remember Martinez’s fellow officers who were with him the night he was killed. They will carry that trauma for the rest of their lives but will still be out on the streets doing their job, he said.

“These officers watched their friend, their colleague die in front of them. They’re scarred for life.” Roy said. “They’re gonna carry that with them for the rest of their life ,but you know something, they’re going to be back out there the next day protecting you and protecting me.”

Funeral services for Martinez will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Rita of Cascia Catholic Church, 7740 S. Western Ave. in the Ashburn neighborhood.

The Latest
Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande have chemistry in abundance as the central witches in glorious-looking but overlong Oz epic. And there’s more to come.
As Jayden Daniels has dropped off, Nix has surged. Meanwhile, Caleb Williams and Drake Maye gave promising performances in losses.
The six-car holiday train will run on all eight lines, starting on the Green and Orange Lines Nov. 29 and concluding on the Yellow Line on Dec. 23.
Devontay Shields was taken into custody at Union Station Saturday on suspicion of attempted kidnapping, court documents show. He allegedly told an informant that he wanted to kidnap a child in Florida and bought toys, zip ties, a train ticket and rented a car.
This is a vibrant and healthy bowl worthy of the season, but it’s a dish that will satisfy vegetarians and carnivores alike.