Mayor Bill de Blasio, second from left, and NYPD Commissioner...

Mayor Bill de Blasio, second from left, and NYPD Commissioner James O'Neill, right, present the retired shield of Det. Steven McDonald to his son, NYPD Sergeant Conor McDonald, left, and his widow, Patti Ann McDonald, during a ceremony at police headquarters in Manhattan on Wednesday, June 6, 2018. Det. McDonald died in 2017 as a result of a gunshot wound he received in the line of duty 31 years earlier. Credit: Charles Eckert

The NYPD bestowed its highest honor on slain Det. Miosotis Familia and retired the shield of Det. Steven McDonald in a ceremony Wednesday in front of police headquarters in Manhattan.

Familia’s daughter accepted the Medal of Honor and family members received a standing ovation as they stood with Mayor Bill de Blasio and NYPD Commissioner James O’Neill.

Familia, 48, a 12-year veteran and mother of three, was fatally shot through the window of a mobile command vehicle on July 5, 2017, in Fordham Heights in the Bronx.

De Blasio said Familia “embodied the American dream” and said she was “taken from us brutally.”

“I want to thank her beautiful children and all of her family members who are here: what extraordinary people you are and you have been a beacon to this city,” he said.

Also honored on Wednesday was McDonald, 59, who died in January 2017 of a heart attack as a result of the injuries he suffered in a July 1986 shooting, which left him a quadriplegic.

McDonald, of Malverne, was shot three times by 15-year-old Shavod Jones in Central Park as he questioned him about a robbery. He subsequently forgave the teenager.

On Wednesday, McDonald’s wife and son emotionally accepted the gift of the retired shield.

“That shield meant a lot to my Dad,” said Conor McDonald, an NYPD sergeant himself, tearing up as he spoke. “My Dad was a good man, that was very important to him, that shield . . . I just miss him; it’s a beautiful moment.”

Patricia Ann McDonald rubbed the number as she reflected on the day, adding that McDonald “used to wear this so proudly.” She said she would have the shield framed.

The shield number, 15231, had in fact been used by another officer, Brendan McNamara, 28, of Suffolk County. But when approached about it, McNamara said he gladly gave it up.

“As soon as I found out whose shield it actually was and that the family was trying to get it retired, I said, ‘Of course.’ I was honored,” he said. “To have known who carried that shield and then to be able to give it back to the family was a true honor.”

And in a moment of kismet, Patti Ann McDonald, the mayor of Malverne, said she ran into McNamara’s parents last spring on the boardwalk in Long Beach, and they recognized her.

“It was a place that was very special to Steven and myself,” she said about the boardwalk, adding that McDonald “wore this badge very proudly and he loved the police department.”

Also among the 70 honorees were 24 officers who died as a result of illnesses following the rescue and recovery efforts after Sept. 11, 2001.

Get the latest news and more great videos at NewsdayTV Credit: Newsday

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Maduro, wife arrive for court ... Kids celebrate Three Kings Day ... Out East: Custer Institute and Observatory ... Get the latest news and more great videos at NewsdayTV

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