The Mayor also seems to be patching things up with the police unions.
In response to a letter from Lieutenants Benevolent Association President Lou Turco, de Blasio at a news conference three weeks ago urged people not to resist arrest.
The “chokehold” death of Eric Garner, who resisted arrest last summer, set off city-wide protests.
"If a police officer says you're under arrest you must — you must — submit to that," de Blasio said. "You must respect that the police officer has given an instruction and you have to respect that instruction.”
Meanwhile, it was learned that de Blasio had recently met twice with Sergeants Benevolent Association President Ed Mullins, who had been among de Blasio’s harshest critics.
Mullins, who had called de Blasio a “nincompoop,” said he now considered the Mayor “a gentleman.”
So is this the same Mayor de Blasio who following Garner’s death welcomed Al Sharpton to City Hall as the symbolic equal of Bratton?
Is this the same Mayor de Blasio who defended Sharpton’s former spokesman Rachel Noerdlinger after she became the chief of staff to the Mayor’s wife when it was reported that her son and her boyfriend had posted anti-police rantings on their websites?
Is this the same de Blasio who ordered Carter to settle the Central Park 5 lawsuit — in which five black and Hispanic teenagers had been falsely convicted of raping a white female jogger — for the staggering figure of $41 million? The five had assaulted others in the park that night and confessed to assaulting the jogger. Their settlement specifically stated that the police and prosecutors had done nothing wrong.
Is this the same de Blasio who gave demonstrators, protesting the lack of an indictment in Garner’s death, free rein across the city? And whose spokesman after two cops were assaulted described them as “alleged” assaults.
OK, so what’s going on here? After a year in office, has de Blasio wised-up to the importance of having the NYPD’s back?
Or is he merely playing politics, believing he has won a public relations victory over the police unions that have criticized him and over the cops who turned their backs on him at the funerals of police officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu, assassinated on Dec. 20?
Referring to the much criticized remarks of Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch, a civil rights attorney who has monitored the NYPD for the past 20 years said of the Mayor: “His politics are totally different now. This never would have happened before Dec. 20th. He is trying to wash the blood off his hands.”