Hundreds Gather To Honor Fallen Officer
"We are so saddened we didn't benefit over the years from the energy, talent and devotion he would have brought to us," Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske told the mourners.
Barber's mother spoke Monday morning during a mass at St. James Cathedral in Seattle and remembered her son's passion for helping others.
"I'm not sure how we are ever going to get over the grief and sorrow of his passing," Emilita Barber said while holding back tears. "But I hope that his passing was not in vain. Hopefully his integrity, dedication and loyalty has served as an inspiration to some people."
Hundreds of law enforcement officers from around the state then lined a brick plaza outside the University of Washington's basketball arena as a motorcade bearing the casket arrived after the morning Mass. Two officers on foot led the hearse beneath the crossed ladders of fire trucks before pallbearers brought the casket inside.
Barber, 26, had been on the force just eight months when an SUV going an estimated 80 mph in a 30-mph zone broadsided his cruiser on Aug. 13, killing him. The driver, Mary Jane Rivas, has been charged with vehicular homicide and cocaine possession in King County Superior Court.
Barber's fiancee, Amber Noel-Du, and uncles, Ron and Ryan Barber, said he loved to have fun but was extremely serious about protecting others. When he was house-sitting for his father once, he removed the hidden spare key because he thought it was a security risk - forcing his father to break into his own home when he returned.
Noel-Du said that before she took a trip to Hawaii for a wedding, he questioned her for an hour about what she would do in a dangerous situation, and suggested she only take tennis shoes in case she needed to run away from something. He called every phone number of locations where she planned to stay, to make sure they weren't outdated.
In that worry and seriousness, Noel-Du said she saw loving care.
"Lito always wanted to protect me," she said. "He did, and I love him for that."
Friends and relatives said that desire to protect led him to
become a loss-prevention officer at Home Depot in Seattle, where he
sometimes investigated the use of fraudulent checks and credit
cards. There, he worked for three years to hone skills he thought
would help him in police work. Among the many uniforms at Monday's
memorial service were about two dozen orange Home Depot aprons.
The Seattle Police Department hired Barber as a recruit in June 2005, and he attended the state Criminal Justice Training Academy. He received his police appointment in January and was assigned to the East Precinct.
"I know God has the best guardian angel working for him right now," Ryan Barber said.