
On Friday night, those who passed through the small town of Cabot may have assumed there was a festival. Crowds clad in nationalist clothes sat in lawn chairs along the streets, waving American flags and cheering at the tens of colorful, red fire vehicles that sounded through the streets.
It was a march, not a festival. Additionally, one of those trucks housed the 50-year-old papa and retired fire chief Corey Comperatore, who was fatally shot on July 13 at a Donald Trump march.
Police escorted mourning in black to a company at the Cabot Methodist Church in Winfield Road before the march to pay their last respects to Comperatore, who was killed at the Butler Farm Show Fairgrounds. A tall American flag hangs from a fire vehicle rope next to the church.
Some locals gathered outside the temple, holding fingers, and embracing with tears, even though the service was personal and that reporters were not permitted in.
Ron Jancosko, 72, said that the symbol, waving in the wind, was the first item he saw when he woke up that morning. Jancosko can see the temple from his room windows because he owns a 40-acre land down the road. When he saw it, he knew it was for Comperatore. And, he knew he should come to pay his respects, yet from the outside of the temple.
” Like most little plantation areas, the homes might be far off but the people are extremely close up”, he said. ” If you do n’t know]Comperatore ] you know somebody who knows him”.
Driving through Cabot, it’s obvious that’s the event. Nearly every storefront window had signs that read” God Bless our brother Corey” or” Thoughts and prayers with Corey” written on them.
Comperatore was shot when Thomas Crooks, 20, tried to assassinate Trump. Even injured were David Dutch, 57, of Plum, and James Copenhaver, 74, of Moon. Both people are recovering at Allegheny General Hospital on the North Side.
On Wednesday, their circumstances were changed from minor to severe. Crooks was tragically shot by an agent from the Secret Service.
Comperatore’s family, Helen, and two sons, Allyson and Kaylee, wrote on Sunday in social media posts that he sacrificed his life to defend them.
Comperatore is regarded as a warrior and a true soldier by many in the area and across the country.
Brian Frantz claimed that his aunt worked with him as a charity fire, and he also had an indirect relationship with Comperatore. Frantz, 38, said that inside of his last, heroic action, Comperatore always favorably impacted the neighborhood.
“]Comperatore ] was a family man — everybody has nothing but nice things to say about ]him ]”, he said outside of his house, which sits across the street from the church.
The crowds on Friday were n’t the only ones to pay respects to Comperatore. Trump requested Comperatore observe a moment of silence on Thursday evening during his conversation at the Milwaukee Republican National Convention.
” He was extraordinary, he was a very respectable former fire chief, respected by everybody”, Trump said during his speech at the RNC.
A part of the Trump household did enter either the viewing on Thursday or the death on Friday for Comperatore, according to officials in Buffalo Township earlier this week. It’s unclear whether they were present at either of the events.
The parade featured second officer vehicles and firetrucks from across the state — Buffalo Township, West Deer Fire, Harrison Hills, Saxonburg, and more. Some of the group members were still cognizant that their small town has been put in the light due to a pointless act of violence.
” It’s terrible knowing that it’s something local…changed his living, his mother’s life forever”, said Denny Krajacic, 70, of Cabot. ” Surely this neighborhood never anticipated anything like this,” he said.
___
© 2024 PG Publishing Co
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.