Chicago Police Officer is First From Department to Die of COVID-19
By Jeremy Gorner and Gregory Pratt
Source Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO -- A Chicago police officer stricken with COVID-19 has died, making him the first cop in the department to die from the disease, officials said.
The officer, Marco DiFranco, 50, was pronounced dead at 1:02 a.m. Thursday at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.
An emotional Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the officer’s death, standing alongside interim police Superintendent Charlie Beck and Fraternal Order of Police President Kevin Graham.
“It is with profound sadness that I’m here to announce the painful news, that for the second time in two days, Chicago has lost another city employee to the COVID-19 virus,” Lightfoot said. “This time, it was a Chicago Police Department officer.”
Since the coronavirus outbreak began, it’s been health care workers and first responders who have been on the front line protecting the public, she said.
“Tragically, this officer gave his life to that fight,” Lightfoot said. “Our hearts go out to the individual’s family, friends and fellow officers whose lives have been forever changed by this terrible loss.”
At last report on Wednesday afternoon, 62 Chicago police officers and two civilian employees of the department had tested positive for the coronavirus.
The tragic news came exactly one year after Lightfoot was elected mayor. Asked how she’s doing in light of the anniversary, Lightfoot choked up.
“I spoke to Officer Di Franco’s wife right before I came out here. Those are very hard conversations to have, when a wife and a family are sitting in that moment with their grief, and I always offer my sincere condolences and sincerely offer to support the family in any way I can,” Lightfoot said.
“But having been through death and grief myself, these moments are so surreal, they are so hard, so I’m feeling that for that family. I’m lucky because I still have my mother, I still have my siblings, and I have an incredible wife and daughter who sustain me every single day.”
In a memo to the 13,000-strong department Thursday morning, Beck said the officer was a 21-year CPD veteran.
“I’m devastated to share the news that a member of the Chicago Police Department passed away last night from complications of the COVID-19 virus,” Beck said.
In the memo, Beck said the officer contracted the virus last week, though he didn’t say whether he likely got infected while on or off duty. The officer was hospitalized this past weekend.
Beck also said the officer had past health issues but didn’t specify what they were.
“Despite some previous health challenges, the severity of the COVID-19 virus became overbearing,” said Beck.
Hired by CPD in May 1998, DiFranco is survived by a wife and two children, and his brother is a Chicago police officer also assigned to the narcotics unit, Beck said.
DiFranco was also highly decorated officer, earning over 150 awards.
“His sacrifice underscores the threats that are faced by public safety employees who are not, by nature of their profession, allowed to shelter in place, shelter at home,” said Beck. “We have always been more at risk for violence because of our profession, and now I think we are more at risk of virus because of our profession.”
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