MIT honors police officer allegedly slain by Boston bombing suspects

A remembrance ceremony for MIT police officer Sean Collier was held Friday in Cambridge, Mass.

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Elise Amendola/AP
Police officers, friends and family members pause by a memorial cross and stone after attending a one-year remembrance ceremony for Massachusetts Institute of Technology Officer Sean Collier on campus in Cambridge, Mass., Friday, April 18, 2014.

Like many other youngsters, Sean Collier wanted to be a police officer. Unlike most, he brought that dream to life — and then died doing it, becoming a central character in the gripping hunt for the Boston Marathon bombing suspects.

The three people killed by the twin explosions, along with the many others who lost limbs, have gotten the lion's share of the attention in the year since the bombings. The loved ones of Collier, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer who investigators say was shot by the bombing suspects, are this week remembering a brother and doting uncle who seemed destined to enter law enforcement.

"I can remember he was 2 or 3 years old running around the house making a siren sound yelling, 'You're breaking the law' and trying to arrest us for not doing what we were supposed to do," said Nicole Lynch, his sister. "His role in the family was to not only protect all of us, but to make sure we were doing the right things."

This year, Team Collier Strong, a group of 25 friends and family members, will run the marathon to raise money for a scholarship fund named for him. And the college held a remembrance ceremony Friday, exactly a year after his death, and unveiled plans for a permanent memorial.

MIT police Chief John DiFava recalled Collier as "a young man who wanted to be a police officer from his earliest days."

"He got involved in so many different ways. He made impacts in so many students' lives. I've never seen anything like it before," DiFava said. "This is a tough day for us."

Collier was called in to help with dispatch when news of the bombings broke in Boston, across the Charles River from the MIT campus in Cambridge.

"Sean knew that we were all worriers in the family, so he texted us all and said: 'I'm fine, but I'm very busy. I'm at work,'" Lynch said.

Days later, he was shot and killed in his cruiser hours after the FBI released photos and video of brothers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev as the bombing suspects. Investigators say they shot him while attempting to take his gun. He was 26.

Collier was the fifth of six children. He studied criminal justice at Salem State University, working for a time as a civilian at the Somerville Police Department.

He adored the Boston Celtics, taught young people to box and helped out at a homeless shelter. When the MIT Outing Club headed to Newfoundland for a weekend of hiking, Collier joined them.

Sally Miller, an MIT student and member of the Outing Club, recalled Collier's enthusiasm in trying to build connections with students.

"We did a lot of hikes together. He was just super curious and adventurous. I feel really lucky to have known him," said Miller, 20, who plans to run the marathon this year as part of the MIT Strong Marathon Team to honor Collier.

Lynch, his sister, recalled feeling relieved when Collier landed what she thought would be a quiet gig at MIT.

"Then he called me after his first week and said, 'I made my first traffic stop and they pulled a knife on me,'" she said. "I remember thinking, 'Oh my goodness, maybe this is not as safe as I thought.'"

The family was so distraught after the shooting that they paid little attention to the details of what happened. Even now, Lynch said, she knows little more about the circumstances of his death than what she has read in the news.

"I still don't know if I know everything that kind of happened that night," she said. "I can't even tell you the kid's name. I'd recognize it, but if you asked me what it was, I couldn't tell you."

Team Collier Strong is raising money for the MIT Sean Collier Scholarship Fund, which will help put one person a year through a criminal justice program.

But Lynch has found other ways of remembering her brother. Shortly after his death, the family adopted a pitbull mix puppy, naming him Jameson after Collier's favorite drink.

The family has gotten condolence letters from around the world, Lynch said.

"He may have lived a very short 26 years of his life, but in that 26 years he lived it with absolutely no regrets," she said. "I think if he could tell us now he would say, 'I lived a very good life and I'm happy with the life that I led.'"

Asked about the possibility of a death penalty for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who alone is heading for trial in the bombings since his brother died during the getaway, Lynch said she's putting her faith in the justice system.

The state has the right to hit Dzhokhar Tsarnaev with charges in Collier's killing once the federal bombing case is resolved.

"If I had a chance to talk to him, I don't know that I would even take that opportunity," she said. "It's just such a very small, insignificant part of the larger picture."

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