Another Police Shooting, Another Black Victim
June 1, 2009
Try as we might in New York City, we cannot outrun the issue of race, especially when it comes to the police.
On one end of the spectrum is the remark by the city�s first black police commissioner Ben Ward about �our dirty little secret� � a reference to the high rate of crime by young black males.
On the other end, there is police commissioner Ray Kelly�s practice of stopping and frisking young black males at a staggeringly disproportionate rate to other groups.
While police officials won�t admit it publicly, race played figured predominantly in the NYPD�s most recent tragedy: a white anti-crime cop�s shooting of an off-duty, plainclothes rookie cop, Omar Edwards, who was black.
Edwards had just gotten off duty when he saw a crack-head allegedly breaking into his parked car in East Harlem. Gun drawn, Edwards, in civilian clothes, with no police badge visible, chased the thief.
The white officer, Andrew Dunton, who happened on the scene as part of an anti-crime team, apparently mistook Edwards for a criminal and fired six times, killing the 25-year-old father of two.
Based on the statements of Dunton, his anti-crime partners and that of a dubious civilian witness, the alleged thief, that Dunton identified himself as a police officer and ordered Edwards to drop his weapon, the department is already blaming Edwards for his death.
Police sources are saying Edwards violated the NYPD�s Patrol Guide, which mandates he remain motionless when so ordered. Instead, based on the statements of Dunton and the others, police say Edwards turned towards Dunton, with his gun hand raised.
We�ll leave it to the medical examiner to square those statements with the fact that the bullet that killed Edwards struck him in the back.
At the heart of issue is the �predisposition� that all blacks are criminals, according to former NYPD captain and now state senator Eric Adams.
Or as Noel Leader, Adams� founding partner of the group, 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care, said, "The immediate assumption is that a black man with a gun is a criminal and the white man is given the benefit of the doubt that there's a possibility that he's in law enforcement.�
While such words border on hyperbole and such police-on-police shootings in New York City are mercifully rare, can anyone recall a black officer in New York mistakenly shooting a white police officer, believing him to be a criminal?
NYPD officials stayed mum on the race factor but others were nothing less than crass about it. Harlem Congressman Charles Rangel made this snarky remark about President Obama�s weekend visit to the city: �Make certain he doesn�t run around East Harlem unidentified.�
Memo to Rangel: It�s not just white police officers who may be �predisposed� to view blacks as criminals. At least two of the four cops who fired 50 shots, killing Sean Bell, were non-white.
And it�s not just police officers who may be so �predisposed.� Recall Jesse Jackson�s remarks a decade or so ago about his fears of being accosted late at night by young black males.
Meanwhile, black leaders across the city from Adams to Al Sharpton to mayoral candidate William Thompson are calling for an independent �outside� investigation into the Edwards� shooting.
Well, we already have one, conducted by the. Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau. At 89 years old, he still has few rivals when it comes to integrity and savvy.
Finally, there is Kelly�s and Mayor Michael�s Bloomberg�s declaration of increased �confrontation training,� which is shorthand for police reform. That�s their answer to this, the fourth police-related, racially-charged fatal shooting in the Bloomberg/Kelly administration, in which all the victims were black.
If the past is any indication, don�t count on much from Kelly. He may be pro-active when it comes to terrorism but not when it comes to reform.
Remember Ousmane Zongo, the African immigrant fatally shot in 2003 during an undercover white police officer in a botched raid of a Manhattan warehouse?
Acknowledging �very troubling questions about the shooting,� Kelly consoled Zongo�s widow in his office at Police Plaza, a meeting arranged by Sharpton. Afterwards, Sharpton told reporters Kelly had promised a full department investigation of the shooting.
Despite Kelly�s promise, he has never revealed his so-called findings.
Remember Timothy Stansbury, the black teenager fatally shot at 1:30 A.M. on the rooftop of his Brooklyn housing project in January, 2004 by a white officer, patrolling with his gun drawn who accidentally fired when he pulled open an interior door and came upon Stansbury?