Race: Still America’s Struggle
August 18, 2014
Whether in Ferguson, Missouri or New York City, no institution in this country is as racially polarized as our criminal justice system. It's a zero sum game, with no winners.
And the police are the face of it.
Why do so many black Americans distrust the police? When I was a young reporter in Detroit, Michigan, its then police commissioner, Ray Girardin, described to me what it had been like for blacks in previous decades. "A black man would go to a police station to report his bicycle stolen," Girardin said. "The police would arrest him for stealing his own bicycle."
Forty years later, that remark still resonates.
We don’t want to think that New York City has been that bad. Still, as late as the 1970s, Clifford Glover, a ten-year-old black boy, was fatally shot in the back by a cop as he fled through a vacant lot in Queens. Randolph Evans, a black teenager from Brooklyn, was fatally shot in the head by a cop for no apparent reason. Both cops were white. Both were acquitted.
The cop who shot Evans pleaded temporary insanity. A year after his acquittal, his sanity returned.
In 1983, six white transit cops beat Michael Stewart, a 25-year-old black man, to death after he was caught smoking a joint in Union Square. The officers, all white, were also acquitted.
In 1999, in perhaps the worst police abuse the city has ever seen, four white cops shot and killed an innocent African immigrant, Amadou Diallo, as he stood in the vestibule of his Bronx apartment. One of the cops imagined Diallo was reaching for a gun. The gun turned out to be a wallet.
They, too, were acquitted.
In 2004, Timothy Stansbury, another black teenager from Brooklyn, was fatally shot by a cop on the rooftop on his building. The shooting was ruled accidental and the cop was not indicted. A year later he was elected a delegate of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association.
In 2006, Sean Bell, another black man, was fatally shot by cops after leaving a bachelor party. They, too, were acquitted.
That's one side of the racial polarization. The other side is that the same black officials who have complained the loudest about police abuse say virtually nothing about what Benjamin Ward, New York's first black police commissioner, referred to as "our dirty little secret."
What he meant was that most crime in the city — in particular, most violent crime — is committed by young black males, against other black males. Black officials criticized him at the time for speaking out.