Law & order
New
York mayor caught between protests, police
Mayor
Bill de Blasio, left, and NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton, right, listen during
a press conference after attending a promotion ceremony for police officers,
Friday, Dec. 19, 2014, in New York. Even as New York’s police department takes
heat for ... more >
By JONATHAN LEMIRE -
Associated Press - Friday, December 19, 2014
NEW
YORK (AP) - Mayor Bill de Blasio was elected last year after making promises to
keep crime low while improving relations between police and the community. As
the tensions between those promises continue to mount, Friday showed just how
tricky threading that needle has been.
In
the morning, de Blasio met with leaders of the protests that have swept through
New York City in the weeks after a grand jury declined to indict the police
officer who placed Eric Garner in a fatal chokehold while trying to arrest him.
In
the afternoon, he ventured to New York Police Department headquarters to heap
praise on the force, a week after an angry police union circulated a petition
to bar him from any NYPD funerals.
And
in the evening, a pair of protests - one pro-police, the other against - were
held outside City Hall, with each side yelling at the other while claiming a
lack of support from its occupant.
“The
mayor is making a big mistake. The police are the most important thing to
control what goes on in this city,” said Andrew Insardi, whose brother is a
retired NYPD officer.
De
Blasio, the city’s first Democratic mayor in a generation, formerly was an
activist who, were he not holding office, likely would have participated in the
protest marches that have become a near-nightly ritual after a Staten Island
grand jury declined to charge the officer, who is white, in the death of
Garner, who was black and repeatedly yelled “I can’t breathe!” in his final
moments, which were captured on video.
The
mayor has voiced support for the protesters’ rights, and the traffic-snarling
protests have largely been peaceful, though a recent poll found that they are
opposed by a majority of New Yorkers. He met with members of the activist group
Justice League NYC and said he agreed with some of their proposals - including
the need to retrain officers - but would not disavow the “Broken Windows”
theory of policing, which cracks down on low-level offenses in an effort to
stop more serious crimes.
De
Blasio also took pains to say he supports Police Commissioner William Bratton
and, hours later in a speech at a NYPD promotions ceremony, heaped praise on
officers for their restraint during the protests.
“There
is a respect, in some cases, even an awe at what his department has done in
recent weeks,” he said. “This is the finest police force in the land.”
De
Blasio was met with polite applause from the crowd at the auditorium at 1
Police Plaza, a far cry from the vitriol directed his way recently from the
police unions. Furious that the mayor invoked the warnings he has given his
son, who is half black, about being careful around police in light of the
Garner decision, the unions accused de Blasio of abandoning them.
The
main rank-and-file police union went a step further and began a push to
prohibit de Blasio and City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, his ally, from
attending any funeral of any officer killed in the line of duty.
The
unions themselves steered clear of the small pro-police rally outside City
Hall. A few dozen people, including some wearing T-shirts bearing the words “I
can breathe,” stared down a larger, louder crowd that denounced police violence
and took up chants like “How do you spell racist? N-Y-P-D,” and “Black lives
matter.”
There
were no immediate reports of altercations or arrests.
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