Cause of the fatal July 5 blaze is still under investigation
A firefighter who was fatally injured along with a colleague while battling a massive fire aboard a cargo ship docked in New Jersey last week was posthumously promoted to captain during his funeral service on Thursday.
Hundreds of mourners, including dozens of uniformed firefighters and law enforcement officers, came to the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark to honor Augusto "Augie" Acabou, 45, a Newark native who had been a city firefighter for nine years. He was recalled as a dedicated public servant who was always trying to make his friends and colleagues laugh.
MAN CONVICTED OF 1976 THANKSGIVING FAMILY MURDERS GRANTED PAROLE AFTER 45 YEARS IN PRISON
Family and friends accompany the casket of Newark firefighter Augusto "Augie" Acabou as it is carried from the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart during his funeral, following his tragic death while fighting a fire on the Italian-flagged cargo ship Grande Costa d'Avorio at the Port of Newark. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
"Our city mourns grievously for one of our heroes — a Newark boy that made his way here with a proud and close-knit family and found a noble and honorable profession," Newark Mayor Ras Baraka told the mourners. "We close our eyes and bow our heads collectively as one city, knowing that this man that we lay to rest here today was one of the very best amongst us,"
Acabou and another Newark firefighter, Wayne "Bear" Brooks Jr., 49, both died while fighting the July 5 fire aboard the Grande Costa d’Avorio, an Italian-flagged vessel carrying thousands of vehicles and other goods that was docked at Port Newark. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.
A funeral service for Brooks will be held Friday.