Slain Federal Corrections Officer Laid to Rest in Pa.

March 4, 2013
Federal Corrections Officer Eric Williams was beaten and stabbed repeatedly by an inmate.

NANTICOKE, Pa. -- Saying he came to pay respects "on behalf of a grateful nation," the top law enforcement officer in the United States arrived in Nanticoke on Saturday to eulogize murdered federal corrections officer Eric Williams.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder praised the 34-year-old Nanticoke man as a dedicated civil servant for the U.S. Department of Justice and read from a letter President Barack Obama penned to the Williams family.

"I want to assure you, all members of America's law enforcement community stand with you -- the Williams family -- today, and an entire nation mourns with you," Holder said during a Funeral Mass at St. Faustina Kowalska Parish. "On behalf of a grateful nation, thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you and stand with all of the Nanticoke community -- including a proud native son, a hero, a patriot."

The hundreds of mourners who crammed into the church listened as the nation's chief prosecutor saluted Williams' selfless service to the country, then vowed to punish the killer and make federal prisons safer.

"This is our promise to you. This is my pledge to you," Holder said. "And it will be our enduring tribute to the memory of Officer Eric Williams. His loss will not be in vain."

A federal corrections officer since Sept. 11, 2011, Williams was beaten and stabbed repeatedly by an inmate at U.S. Penitentiary at Canaan in Wayne County on Monday night as he was preparing to lock inmates in their cells for a nightly head count. He became only the nation's 25th federal corrections officer killed in the line of duty since 1901.

Following his remarks, Holder read from a letter Obama directed to the Williams family.

"Michelle and I were saddened to learn of the passing of your son Eric and we send our heartfelt condolences. As an officer of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Eric dedicated himself to the country and keeping us safe," the president wrote. "Our nation is forever indebted to the brave men and women who place themselves in harm's way to protect their fellow Americans, and we honor Eric for his dedicated service."

The director of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, Charles E. Samuels Jr., also delivered a eulogy, telling mourners that "the news of Officer Williams' death marked the saddest day in my 25-year career" with the bureau.

"Feb. 25 will forever be a dark day for me," Samuels said.

"Most people in the community know very little about what goes on behind the fences and walls of prisons in this country. They have no idea what it takes for correctional officers to keep our prisons safe, secure and humane," Samuels said. "It's an extremely difficult and challenging job. But Eric embraced the challenges and set an example."

Samuels noted Williams' name will "forever be memorialized and inscribed" in the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial and the Correctional Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C.

In other eulogies by loved ones, Williams was remembered on a personal level -- as a devoted Seattle Seahawks fan, as someone who never once tasted mustard, ketchup, mayonnaise or salad dressing, as someone who worked countless hours to turn his new cottage at Lily Lake into a home, and as a nice guy with a quirky smile who tried to make friends with everyone.

Lifelong best friend Todd Hrivnak recalled a trip to Buffalo, N.Y., years ago when Williams spotted legendary Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly and other players dining at a hotel restaurant. Williams woke Hrivnak up and brought him down to the restaurant in hopes they could meet the eventual Hall of Fame player.

"It was because of Eric we spent that night hanging out with Jim Kelly and his associates. Not only did we get autographs, but Eric had his personally signed, 'Sorry we beat the Seahawks, Jim Kelly,'" Hrivnak recalled. "But Eric also convinced Jim Kelly and his friends to come back to the room to wake up one of our other friends. As we rode the elevator up, Eric continued to talk to him as if he knew him like anybody else. And as the doors opened, Eric and I got pushed out and the doors closed. Eric looked at me and said, 'What just happened?' I said, 'Well, Eric, ya just got thrown out of an elevator by Jim Kelly.'"

The collective laughs and smiles at the story marked a rare happy moment during a week dominated by such sadness and tears.

Williams, a 1996 graduate of Greater Nanticoke Area High School, was ambushed at work around 10 p.m. Monday by an inmate, who beat him and repeatedly stabbed him with a homemade weapon, authorities said. Union officials say Williams -- equipped with only a radio, keys and handcuffs -- was working alone in a unit housing about 130 inmates and was preparing to lock them into their cells when he was attacked. An inmate was detained, but no charges have been filed.

The Rev. James Nash, who presided over the Funeral Mass with the assistance of several other priests and Diocese of Scranton Bishop James Bambera, told mourners, "It's a difficult time to explain why these things happen."

"I wish I had the answer, but I don't," the Rev. Nash said, noting the best comfort is to rely on the words of Jesus, that "he who believes in me shall never die."

The Rev. Nash looked out at the hundreds of correctional officers from around the country and praised the work they do dealing with the "worst of humanity." He said he had a conversation with one of the officers, who explained the collective hurt they are feeling.

"He said the ones that are getting us through it are his family," the Rev. Nash recalled.

The Rev. Nash then looked at Williams' parents, Donald and Jean, and siblings, Mark, Kyle, and Lauren, telling them, "What a tribute."

Following the Mass, Williams' casket was wheeled out of church as bagpipers played. The long funeral procession, led by a Nanticoke police cruiser, winded through the city to South Prospect Street. As the procession approached Middle Road, the stream of vehicles, including the hearse carrying Williams, drove under a giant U.S. flag hung from the ladder trucks of the Nanticoke and Hanover Township fire departments -- a final tribute to a hometown hero off to his final resting place, St. Mary's Cemetery in Hanover Township.

In the weeks and years to come, Holder promised to remember Williams' ultimate sacrifice for the nation and make sure his death was not in vain.

"Every day, up until his last day, Eric put on his uniform and selflessly placed the safety of others above his own, knowingly putting himself in harm's way among hardened and extremely dangerous criminals in order to keep his fellow citizens, his community and his country more secure," Holder said. "His example is deeply inspiring and his story is one I will always carry with me."

Copyright 2013 - The Citizens' Voice, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

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