Thousands attend funeral for fallen corrections officer

Published: Friday, June 29 2007 1:01 p.m. MDT

Tooele County Sheriff Officer Eric McCollum stands with law enforcement motorcycles in front of the chapel in Bluffdale before the funeral of fallen corrections officer Stephen Anderson.

Tom Smart, Deseret Morning News

BLUFFDALE — Thousands of friends, family members, co-workers and fellow law enforcers paid their final respects today to a man remembered as a loving husband, devoted father and a man of God who led by example with his kind heart and generosity.

Stephen Anderson, 60, was laid to rest amongst a massive outpouring of support. The 1,800-seat capacity chapel and overflow area in the Bluffdale LDS Stake Center, 14400 South 2742 West, where funeral services were held, was already near capacity an hour before the funeral began. Chairs were put on a stage behind the overflow area and video was fed into four overflow rooms to accommodate the large crowd.

Police chiefs and sheriffs from across the state sat in the front of the stage along with Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. and his wife, Mary Kaye, to pay tribute.

Anderson, a Utah State Corrections officer was shot and killed Monday during an escape attempt by inmate Curtis Allgier who had just completed an MRI at the University Orthopaedic Center, police say. Allgier was charged Thursday with aggravated murder. Prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty.

At Friday's funeral service, the stake center's sleepy neighborhood seemed to double in population as police squad cars, motorcycles, ambulances and other emergency vehicles from just about every law enforcement organization in Utah lined the streets for more than a mile.

Between 2,000 to 3,000 people were expected to attend the service from Utah, the United States and even Canada.

John Bray was part of a four-member honor guard from the Rhode Island Department of Corrections who attended Friday's service.

"We feel we need to be here," he said.

Bray said because corrections officers are the ones who work behind bars, they are sometimes the forgotten ones. The Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers wanted to make sure Anderson wasn't forgotten, he said.

On a table outside the chapel, pictures of Anderson, many in wood frames he made, were displayed. Many of the pictures showed him and his love for the outdoors, either on ATVs, rafting with grandchildren or using his bulldozer to clear new campsites and trails for his family.

In front of the pictures was a sign, "I believe in superheroes."

On another table were Anderson's badges, awards, a plaque presented to Anderson's family following his death, and a Boy Scout handbook. Family members say being Scoutmaster was his favorite church calling.

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