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  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: The program for the funeral...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: The program for the funeral service of Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan rests on the grass outside Bayside Adventure Church Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Denis and Kelly O'Sullivan leave...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Denis and Kelly O'Sullivan leave Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif., after funeral services for their daughter, Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan, Thursday, June 27, 2019. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Peace officers salute as the...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Peace officers salute as the body of slain Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan is carried from a funeral service, Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Beth Eldridge wipes a tear...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Beth Eldridge wipes a tear away as the funeral procession of fallen Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan passes by Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. Eldridge has a son who hopes to enter the police academy in two years. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • A Stockton police officer sheds a tear as the body...

    (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

    A Stockton police officer sheds a tear as the body of slain Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan leaves Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif., Thursday, June 27, 2019.

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Stanford Ranch Road is lined...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Stanford Ranch Road is lined with citizens paying their respects to slain Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan as her hearse is driven, Thursday, June 27, 2019, away from Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Jeannette Davie and Kristen Groves...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Jeannette Davie and Kristen Groves (left to right) with their children hold signs and flags in honor of slain Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan, Thursday, June 27, 2019, after her funeral at Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Well wishers line an overpass...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Well wishers line an overpass in Interstate 80 waiting for the funeral procession of fallen Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan to arrive on Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Sacramento police officers stand at...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Sacramento police officers stand at attention as the funeral service for their fallen colleague, police officer Tara O'Sullivan, begins on Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: John Hall, Robyn MacLeod and...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: John Hall, Robyn MacLeod and Keaton Waller (left to right) honor slain Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan as her hearse is driven away Thursday, June 27, 2019, from Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: The casket of Sacramento police...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: The casket of Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan leaves Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif., after funeral services, Thursday, June 27, 2019. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: The badge of a Pleasant...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: The badge of a Pleasant Hill police officer bears a black band in honor of fallen Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan, Thursday, June 27, 2019, after her funeral service at Bayside Adventure Church in Roseville, Calif. O'Sullivan began her law enforcement career as a cadet with the Pleasant Hill police. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: A pipe and drum band...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: A pipe and drum band prepares to enter the Bayside Adventure Church for the funeral service of Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan, Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Beth Eldridge, right, watches with...

    ROSEVILLE, CA - June 27: Beth Eldridge, right, watches with other well wishers as the funeral procession of fallen Sacramento police officer Tara O'Sullivan passes by Thursday, June 27, 2019, in Roseville, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

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Annie Sciacca, Business reporter for the Bay Area News Group is photographed for a Wordpress profile in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Thursday, July 28, 2016. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group)
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Near the end of the two-hour funeral service, a video showing photos of slain Sacramento police Officer Tara O’Sullivan as a little girl making silly faces, bubbly teenager and vibrant young adult poignantly illustrated for the gathering of family, friends and hundreds of law enforcement officers how early her life was tragically cut short.

“No one ever asked, ‘Was Tara here?’ ” her godfather, Gary Roush, told the 1,000-plus people who packed the Bayside Adventure Church in Rocklin on Thursday morning. “She lived an extraordinary life.”

Roush described his goddaughter, who grew up in the East Bay, as tough but also warm and funny. “She was marble wrapped in velvet.”

Tara O’Sullivan’s “quiet confidence” stood out more than a decade ago, Martinez police Sgt. Fred Ferrer told the gathering, recalling when he met the teenager who had enrolled in the Youth Explorers program for the Martinez and Pleasant Hill police departments.

She carried that same confidence throughout her life, which ended last week at the age of 26 when a gunman fatally shot her during a domestic-disturbance call in northern Sacramento, Ferrer said.

O’Sullivan, who was born in Walnut Creek, knew she wanted to be a police officer from a young age, Roush said as he delivered an emotional eulogy. He shared his memories of her as a girl “before she donned the uniform,” describing her as “one of the rare people who devoured life.”

Tara O’Sullivan. (Sacramento Police Department) 

O’Sullivan played soccer at College Park High School in Pleasant Hill. After graduating from there in 2011, she went on to Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill, then to Sacramento City College and finally to California State University, Sacramento.

She fiercely loved her family, Roush said, and she had an “intense affection” for dogs.

O’Sullivan’s exuberance showed in anecdotes that Shiloh Baptist Church pastor Anthony Sadler shared on behalf of her family. He said O’Sullivan’s mother, Kelley, used three adjectives to describe her daughter: “brave, beautiful and bossy.”

Ferrer said O’Sullivan had a way of being assertive and challenging without being “cocky.” She was inquisitive and wanted to understand, he said. Like the time when as a teenager on a ride-along she insisted that he explain why they weren’t towing a car after a drug bust and didn’t hesitate to tell him she thought they were wrong not to.

From early on, her dedication to policing was obvious, her colleagues agreed.

At least one of her trainers at the police academy called her the best trainee he’s ever had, according to Brent Kaneyuki, a Sacramento police sergeant. He described O’Sullivan as an exceptional athlete who set a new record for the department’s plank-holding portion of the physical fitness testing and touted her “unique ability to relate and communicate with all people in the community.”

Kaneyuki related a story about an assignment that required trainees to write an autobiography and describe what they like most about police work. While many simply wrote one or two roles, Kaneyuki pointed out, “Tara had her entire Sacramento PD career planned out,” from being a K-9 officer to being on the SWAT team and serving as a mounted officer.

Sacramento police Chief Daniel Hahn said O’Sullivan stood out as soon as he met her when she was a student at Sacramento State and said she wanted to be a police officer.

“Her godfather said, ‘You always know when Tara was in the room,’ ” Hahn said, adding, “I’d say that’s accurate.”

According to police, O’Sullivan was partnered with a training officer when she was shot just before 6 p.m. on June 19, hours after other officers had responded to a call regarding a disturbance between a man and a woman. O’Sullivan and her partner went to a residence on the 200 block of Redwood Avenue to stand by while the woman gathered some belongings from a residence. Shortly after 6 p.m., police on the scene reported shots had been fired, and an officer — O’Sullivan — was struck by gunfire. She died later at UC Davis Medical Center.

“We lost an amazing person,” Hahn said at the service. “Tara’s partners fought with everything they had against evil.”

Turning toward her family, he said, “The debt our department and community owe you can never be repaid.”

Roush shared with the gathering the things that now won’t happen: Tara won’t visit him and his husband later this year, she won’t be the maid of honor at her sister’s wedding, and she won’t watch her brother get married.

“That won’t happen,” Roush said solemnly after describing each plan. Still, he would try to “remember the bright light that was my sweet goddaughter.”

In comments throughout the service, her colleagues thanked her for her service and repeated words they seemed to know would be most comforting to O’Sullivan, the dedicated police officer committed to protecting her community. “We’ll take it from here.”