Salman J. Choudhury
New York, October 13, 2025: She gave her life to protect the city. Yet even after her death, the measure of her sacrifice is still being tested. The children of the late NYPD officer Miosotis Familia are still being denied her rightful pension, caught in the web of complex state laws and administrative rules that threaten their future.
In 2017, while on duty, Miosotis Familia was shot and killed by an assailant. The New York Police Department honored her as a hero of the city. But in real life, her three children now struggle to survive without the financial support they should have inherited.
“My mother gave her life for the city, but now the state says we aren’t entitled to her pension,” said her daughter Delila Familia, who is now the guardian of her two younger siblings. The pension that should have been their lifeline is now trapped in bureaucratic red tape.
According to current New York state law, the children of a deceased officer can only receive pension benefits if a legally recognized guardian is in place. In Miosotis Familia’s case, although her daughter Delila assumed guardianship, the law did not formally recognize her as a “qualified guardian,” leaving the family without access to the pension.
Local lawmakers and human rights advocates have called the situation “cruel and inhumane,” stressing that “a mother who gave her life for the city should not have her children suffer due to paperwork and technicalities.”
While the state administration has pledged to review the matter, no final decision has been made yet.
Humanly, this case is more than just about one family — it raises serious questions about how compassionate our laws are when the children of a fallen hero face uncertainty and struggle to survive. Let humanity be free — and let unjust politics perish.
The sacrifice of one mother should not be lost to an inhumane bureaucracy — this is now a question of conscience for the city.