Memorial Day ceremony held at Los Angeles National Cemetery

This is the first-ever telecast of the annual Memorial Day ceremony at the Los Angeles National Cemetery.

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Monday, May 25, 2020
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For the first time ever, the annual Memorial Day commemoration at the Los Angeles National Cemetery was broadcast and streamed on ABC7.

ABC7 was proud to present the first-ever telecast of the annual Memorial Day ceremony at the Los Angeles National Cemetery.

The Memorial Day ceremony is one of the largest ceremonies held in Southern California, where local leaders and families have traditionally gathered at the L.A. National Cemetery to pay their respects. Nearly 90,000 service members dating back to the Civil War, including 15 Medal of Honor recipients, are buried at L.A. National Cemetery.

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the 131st Memorial Day Celebration was different than prior years: With physical distancing guidelines, the public was not be able to attend.

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The celebration was produced by ABC7's sister station KABC-TV Los Angeles.

"The annual Memorial Day ceremony is such an important way for the community to come together and honor the nearly 1.2 million veterans of greater Los Angeles. Despite the challenges of this unprecedented time that prevented a physical gathering, we wanted to preserve the tradition and deliver a way for the community to still safely experience it," said Cheryl Fair, president and general manager of KABC-TV.

Eyewitness News anchor David Ono emceed the ceremony live from West L.A. He was joined onstage with keynote speaker Brigadier General Michael Leeney, deputy commanding general of the 40th Infantry Division. L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti joined the ceremony virtually in a pre-recorded tribute, as well as Congressman Ted W. Lieu who appeared from Washington, D.C., to honor members of the armed forces; Rabbi Ed Feinstein from Valley Beth Shalom Synagogue gave the invocation, and Monsignor Frank Hicks from St. Basil Catholic Church gave the benediction before the traditional "Echo Taps." Additional speakers appeared on-site from four stages spatially placed throughout the cemetery to adhere to social distancing.