Lastly, there is the national media, which, in the wake of the Brown and Garner deaths, have concocted a narrative of brutal white police officers and victimized black men that tell only half the story.
In the Ferguson case, the media accepted the accounts of eyewitnesses who claimed that white police officer Darren Wilson shot the unarmed Brown who had his hands up. Forensic evidence told a different story — that Brown appeared to have struggled with Wilson and may have attempted to reach for his gun, as Wilson claimed. By then, however, “Hands up, don’t shoot,” had become a worldwide mantra for police brutality.
The other half of the unreported narrative about the chasm between police and communities they serve is the chaos and violence in black urban neighborhoods that police face daily, which was as much a factor in Saturday’s assassinations as police brutality.
Officers Liu and Ramos were shot in their patrol car — not in the 84th Precinct where they were based, but on a post outside a housing project in the 79th Precinct due to a spike in shootings there, police sources said.
Unless the mayor and the NYPD can come together, the legitimate grievances of citizens who have been victims of police brutality will be lost, starting with the unlawful citywide stop-and-frisks under the previous administration to the horribly poor police tactics that led to Garner’s death.
“Pulling from my history as one of the first Neighborhood Community Team leaders of the early 1960s, the key word for the team was ‘respect.’ Give respect, get respect,” a retired black police officer emailed.
“The key to any conversation are the first words out your mouth. … Our officers were taught simple acts of respect that would make their jobs easier and safer. The fact that the 70-year-old female preferred being called Mrs. Brown vs. Mamie. That after an interview or pleasant conversation, it is all right to have a handshake. That it’s all right when making eye contact while walking a beat to say hello or good morning. …
“I can only imagine that the first words out of Officer Wilson’s mouth to Michael Brown were not, ‘Would you guys get out of the street for your own safety?’ Probably something like, ‘Get the f..k out of the street.’”
He added: “Does anyone actually know what was first said to Mr. Garner…?”
So where do we go from here?
Despite Lynch’s pronouncement that de Blasio would not be welcome at police funerals, the mayor must attend them and speak. Perhaps he can deal with the climate he helped create. Perhaps he might consider apologizing for some of his words and deeds and acknowledge that there were unintended consequences he did not foresee.
Perhaps, too, Lynch might walk back some of his remarks.
Don’t count on it, though. Lynch faces both contract negotiations and an upcoming election.
As for de Blasio, this column has noted that he has the naïveté of John Lindsay, who believed he could effect a social revolution, and the arrogance of Rudy Giuliani, who refused to listen to anybody but himself.
The PBA said Monday that the email cited in this column was not from Lynch — although it expressed Lynch's past statements about Mayor Bill de Blasio. This reporter received a copy of that email at 9:37 am Sunday morning from a retired NYPD chief. This reporter then called the PBA Communications Director to confirm the email's authenticity leaving a detailed message as to what the email contained. The phone call was not returned.