Police officers stand at attention as the funeral procession for...

Police officers stand at attention as the funeral procession for NYPD Officer Peter Figoski arrives at St. Joseph Credit: John RocaRoman Catholic Church in Babylon.

The slaying of two uniformed NYPD officers Saturday in Brooklyn harks back to the bloody 1970s when a number of cops and their partners were killed while on duty, including two executed by members of the Black Liberation Army.

On April 2, 1978, officers Christie Masone, 33, and his partner Norman Cerullo, 29, were gunned down on Willoughby Street in Brooklyn. While attempting to question robbery suspects, the officers got into a gunfight with them. One suspect was killed and a second suspect was wounded.

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The slaying of two uniformed NYPD officers Saturday in Brooklyn harks back to the bloody 1970s when a number of cops and their partners were killed while on duty, including two executed by members of the Black Liberation Army.

On April 2, 1978, officers Christie Masone, 33, and his partner Norman Cerullo, 29, were gunned down on Willoughby Street in Brooklyn. While attempting to question robbery suspects, the officers got into a gunfight with them. One suspect was killed and a second suspect was wounded.

Cleveland McKinley Davis was tried three times for the killing of Masone and Cerullo. Two trials ended in mistrials and the third led to an acquittal. Davis maintained that he had not shot the officers.

In September 1975, Officer Andrew Glover, 34, of Manhattan, and Sgt. Frederick Reddy, 50, of Levittown were shot and killed after they approached a car during a traffic stop on East Fifth Street in Manhattan's Lower East Side. According to news reports at the time, the officers had ordered the car to stop when the driver shot them and fled on foot. Luis Serrano Velez, 27, pleaded guilty to the murders. When he was sentenced in November 1976 to up to life in prison by Judge Burton Robert, Velez was quoted as saying "I have no regrets" and that he had been the victim of the rules of a "police state."

Another unforgettable killing of cops on patrol occurred in May 1971 when officers Waverly M. Jones, 33, and Joseph A. Piagentini, 28, were shot by two black men who approached them from behind and fired at them repeatedly. Piagentini was white and Jones was black; both were on patrol in an upper Manhattan public housing area now known as Rangel Houses. Investigators arrested and charged three former members of the Black Liberation Army with the killings. All were convicted.

The murders of Jones and Piagentini came during a year when seven officers were killed and 30 others wounded in the line of duty, a situation that prompted headline writers to ask in print: "Is There A 'War' Against The Cops?"

On Feb. 26, 1988, Officer Eddie Byrne, 22, was murdered execution-style in his radio car on a lonely South Jamaica street. David McClary shot the rookie five times in the head at close range.

Until Saturday, the NYPD officer most recently fatally shot in the line of duty was Det. Peter Figoski, 47, of West Babylon. He was shot in December 2011 while responding to the botched robbery of a drug dealer in Brooklyn.

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