Family and friends of the Queens jogger found dead earlier this month held a memorial walk in Howard Beach in her honor Tuesday night. Our Lori Chung was there and filed this report.

Carrying white balloons in her honor, hundreds of supporters walk near the stretch of marsh in Howard Beach where Karina Vetrano was murdered. 

"It's evidence to everyone the power my daughter had," said the victim's mother Cathy.

"We all decided tonight we would represent with white balloons, white bows, white hearts and butterflies were her favorite thing they were all over her room," said one walk organizer.

This memorial march on the edge of Spring Creek Park also a call for justice as Vetrano's parents urge their daughter's killer to come forward.

"He's a weak, evil piece of (expletive) and that's too good to even call him," the victim's mother said.

"Turn yourself in, turn yourself in," her father Phil echoed.

Relatives simmering with anger and grief two weeks after the 30-year-old was found beaten, strangled and sexually assaulted near her favorite running path in the weeds. In an attack that has shaken the entire neighborhood.

"We just all want answers so that we're not scared to walk," said one neighbor.

"They need to find whoever did this, this is terrible," said another.

"We, like all other communities, are affected by violence and this could be anyone's daughter, child," said a third.

The outpouring of support for the family includes the more than $245,000 raised on a Go Fund Me page. A portion of that contributes to the $100,000 reward now offered to help catch the killer. Cathy and Phil Vetrano hoping it's enough incentive to discourage anyone from helping or harboring their daughter's killer.

"Just know we have support, the resources of very high people, and we will get you it's just a matter of time so if he's someone you might know, get the money," said Cathy Vetrano.

The Vetranos say the rest of the money raised by that Go Fund Me page will be put in a memorial foundation set up in Karina's name.

In the meantime they're asking anyone with any information to call the NYPD crime stoppers hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS.