"It was 10 at night. She was in my bedroom and said 'I'm going to work now. I love you.' She gave me a hug and a kiss and she went back into my doorway, and we just looked at each other for a minute and I said 'Can I have another hug?' And she said 'Of course,' and she hugged me," Villella said.
Hours later, on July 5th, 2017, the 12-year veteran of the NYPD was shot to death.
"It makes us hard to celebrate [the 4th], because it doesn't feel appropriate knowing after midnight, she'd be killed," Villella said.
Villella, 20, was forced to raise her twin siblings on her own. She became their legal guardian.
Genesis Villella (C) and twins Delilah and Peter Vega, children of New York City Police Officer Miosotis Familia, grieve during her funeral at the World Changers Church, in The Bronx July 11, 2017. RICHARD DREW/AFP/Getty Images)
"I'm eternally grateful to my sister for putting her life on hold and sacrificing her youth to raise me and Delilah as a parent. All we had was our mom, and Genesis became our mom and dad overnight because of this tragedy," Peter Vega said.
"Miosotis was the first female NYPD officer to be killed in the line of duty since 9/11," Rep. Ritchie Torres said.
"She always gave great advice and a helping hand and she laughed and smiled continuously," NYPD Assistant Chief Benhamin Gurley said.
The memorial was held outside the 46th Precinct in the Bronx, where Familia worked and where a mural of her is painted.
Fight to pass legislation to grant family benefits
Familia's three children are asking law enforcement and lawmakers to help them pass legislation that would grant them their mother's pension . Under the current law, children of single parent cops who die on the job are not entitled to the benefits for life, only until 23, and only if they are enrolled in college.
"The bill makes it so the surviving children, the orphans, have something legislatively to allow us to access the death benefits," said Villella. "When my mom was killed I had to drop out of college so I could raise the kids... My mom should have been standing next to me to watch the kids walk across the stage and receive their diploma."
The bill needs to pass the senate and assembly in Albany, but the legislative session ended in June.
The family hopes the bill is passed in the next session, in January.
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