considered his high school classmates his best friends. A man who helped raise his niece as if she was his own daughter.
“Under his thick skin was a human being who enjoyed life to the fullest,” friend Eddie Gutierrez said.
That charisma earned him the nickname “Sweet Baby Ray” around the Bloomingdale Police Department.
“This kid made such an impact on us and our entire community,” Chief Frank Giammarese told his family.
Murrell was killed Jan. 19 when his police SUV crashed into a pole and utility box at Army Trail Road and Cardinal Avenue. He was responding on wet and slippery streets to a reported retail theft at a business on Army Trail.
More than 1,000 mourners, many of them law enforcement officers from across the suburbs and even Mishawaka, Indiana, attended the funeral to pay tribute to Murrell, who would have celebrated a year on the force in March.
Murrell previously worked for the Cook County sheriff’s department and in security. He had jobs at a photo studio and as a greeter at an Applebee’s. He once washed cars.
So when he finally got the interview for the job he dreamed about since he was 6 years old, Murrell was persistent.
“I want to be a Bloomingdale police officer,” he told Giammarese.
“We got a good guy here,” the chief thought.
The Addison native, who graduated from the College of DuPage police academy with distinction, was credited with helping save a man’s life even before he officially started the job. Murrell was enrolled in the department’s field training program when he and another officer used a defibrillator on the man, who was suffering a heart attack.
As an uncle, he helped raise his niece, Mia, mentored her, taught her how to ride a bike and took her to dances. If he had his way, she wouldn’t date until she was 30, her mom and Murrell’s sister, Antoinette Williams, told the gathering.
“You were the best uncle in the world to her,” she said.
His Bloomingdale co-workers filled the pews behind Murrell’s family. Stoic before the service, they left the church in tears.
A funeral procession of about 1,000 police and fire vehicles then headed to Murrell’s final resting place in Oakridge-Glen Oaks Cemetery in Hillside.
At the grave, a large crowd of friends, family and police officers gathered for a brief service. Before leading mourners in a prayer, a speaker called Murrell a “true hero.”
“We long for real heroes, and we have one here,” he said.
Murrell was buried in his police uniform.

