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Family, NYPD officers pack church to mourn 23-year-old cadet who died three weeks after leukemia diagnosis

  • About 500 NYPD officers and cadets line up outside St....

    David Wexler/For New York Daily News

    About 500 NYPD officers and cadets line up outside St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church in Hewlett, Long Island.

  • Ann, mother of NYPD Siciliano, holds the flag after funeral...

    David Wexler/For New York Daily News

    Ann, mother of NYPD Siciliano, holds the flag after funeral services.

  • NYPD officers carry the Siciliano's casket to the hearse.

    David Wexler/For New York Daily News

    NYPD officers carry the Siciliano's casket to the hearse.

  • Siciliano's fiancée Ashlee Ragusano is handed a rose after the...

    David Wexler/For New York Daily News

    Siciliano's fiancée Ashlee Ragusano is handed a rose after the services.

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Hundreds of relatives and NYPD officers squeezed into a Long Island church Friday to bid farewell to a promising police cadet who died of leukemia.

Jake Siciliano, 23, died Tuesday less than a month after he was diagnosed with the aggressive form of cancer.

The aspiring cop was just three months into his NYPD training and had proposed to his girlfriend on Oct. 1.

“Jake didn’t give up his life. The fact is, he was willing to,” Father Tom Moriarty told the mourners packed into the St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church in Hewlett.

NYPD cadet Jake Siciliano had just proposed to his girlfriend on Oct. 1.
NYPD cadet Jake Siciliano had just proposed to his girlfriend on Oct. 1.

“As a police officer, he was willing to. This church is packed with people who are willing to and we can’t forget that.”

After prayer and communion, a group of NYPD officers carried Siciliano’s casket, draped in a green and white-striped American flag, out of the church as his family and friends followed closely behind.

Ann, mother of NYPD Siciliano, holds the flag after funeral services.
Ann, mother of NYPD Siciliano, holds the flag after funeral services.

Hundreds of officers stood in silence outside as Siciliano’s family helped to lift his casket into the back of a waiting hearse.

The hearse then drove off, escorted by a police motorcade, to the sorrowful soundtrack of bagpipes and drums.

Siciliano graduated Lynbrook High School in 2012 and played lacrosse at Nassau Community College before pursuing his dream to become a New York City cop.

“He was a great kid. He had it figured out,” said his aunt Linda Dunn, 51. “Anything he wanted to do, he made it happen for himself.”

NYPD officers carry the Siciliano's casket to the hearse.
NYPD officers carry the Siciliano’s casket to the hearse.

Dunn said Siciliano’s family was stunned by the pace at which the leukemia ravaged his body.

“Three weeks — how does that happen?” she said.

“One day he’s fine and the next he’s in the hospital. Never thought that this would happen.”

Siciliano’s fiancée Ashlee Ragusano wrote a touching tribute on the day before his funeral.

Siciliano's fiancée Ashlee Ragusano is handed a rose after the services.
Siciliano’s fiancée Ashlee Ragusano is handed a rose after the services.

“God picked the most incredible NYPD Officer to lead the way & Heaven has now gained the purest of all angels,” she wrote on her Facebook page.