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Posts Tagged ‘Sergeant Crowley’

Trouble brewing

Barack Obama’s beer-barrel diplomacy aims to defuse a race row

AND now the world knows what beer he drinks. On Thursday July 30th, Barack Obama, clasping a Bud Light, met James Crowley, a white police sergeant apparently partial to a Blue Moon and Henry Louis Gates, a black Harvard professor who glugged on a Sam Adams Light. The three, along with Joe Biden, the vice-president and Buckler man, met to chat about an incident that has become known as Gatesgate. After the past week, Mr Obama probably found his cold beer unusually welcome.

The saga sounds daft but threatened to spiral into a controversy about race in a country that has just elected its first black president. Sergeant Crowley arrested Mr Gates on July 16th outside his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mr Gates had locked himself out and then broke back in. A neighbour, suspicions aroused, called the police. The rest of the details are far from clear. It seems that Mr Gates lost his temper with Sergeant Crowley and was detained briefly before all charges were dropped. Mr Obama was pulled into the row when he said, during a press conference, that the police had acted “stupidly”. …

Harvey Grossman: A Matter of No Middle Ground

Everyone knows that as prudent people we ordinarily should not get “lippy” with a police officer, but Professor Gates is not guilty of violating that maxim. He was standing up for his rights.

Harry Smith: Just a Minute: Beer Profiling

As the big summit meeting at the White House draws closer, I’m wondering what we can learn from the beer preferences of Henry Louis Gates and James Crowley.

Natalie Holder-Winfield: Why America Needs the Rage of the Privileged Black Class

After gathering the pertinent facts surrounding last week’s arrest of distinguished Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates–reading the police report, reviewing Massachusetts’ disorderly conduct statute, and…

Gates says it’s time to ‘move on’ from his arrest

BOSTON (AP) — Black Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. says he’s ready to move on from his arrest by a white police officer, hoping to use the encounter to improve fairness in the criminal justice system and saying “in the end, this is not about me at all.”
After a phone call from President Barack [...]

Joan E. Dowlin: The Healer in Chief

Let’s look at the history of blacks and police in our nation in this century. The story is always familiar. The police say they are protecting lives and the community. They shoot first and ask questions later.

Paula B. Mays: A Teachable Moment

Sergeant Crowley and Professor Gate spoke different languages in that moment in time in the house of Dr. Gates.

Obama wins over race row academic

Harvard academic agrees to meet white officer who detained him as president seeks to defuse tension

Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, who was arrested on suspicion of breaking into his own home, has accepted Barack Obama’s invitation to visit him at the White House to have a beer with the white police officer who detained him.

Gates told the Boston Globe last night that he had spoken to Obama and agreed to meet Cambridge police sergeant James Crowley. Gates, one of the country’s most prominent black academics, said he hoped his arrest would lead to greater sensitivity on racial profiling.

“My entire academic career has been based on improving race relations, not exacerbating them,” Gates said in an email, adding: “It is time for all of us to move on, and to assess what we can learn from this experience.”

Obama phoned the two men to invite them to the White House yesterday as he sought to calm the debate sparked when he said the police in Cambridge, Massachusetts, had “acted stupidly” in arresting Gates.

The president told the policeman he should have chosen his words more carefully, but stopped short of issuing an apology.

“Because this has been ratcheting up and I helped to contribute to ratcheting it up, I want to make it clear that in my choice of words I unfortunately gave the impression I was maligning the Cambridge police department and Sergeant Crowley and I could have calibrated those words differently,” he said. However, the president also said he felt both men could have handled the situation better.

He said he had invited both Crowley and Gates for “a beer here in the White House”. It is not yet clear whether Crowley has accepted the invitation.

A joint statement by three Massachusetts police unions said they appreciated the president’s “sincere interest” and added that Crowley had a friendly and meaningful conversation with Obama.

Crowley has not spoken to the media, but his brother, JP Crowley, a fellow officer on the Cambridge department, said: “I think he just wants to get back to a sense of normalcy, back to work. He didn’t ask for this.”

Earlier, Steve Killian, president of the Cambridge police patrol officers’ association, denied that race was a factor in the arrest and demanded an apology from Obama and the state governor, Deval Patrick, who is African-American and had described the arrest as “every black man’s nightmare”.

“Cambridge police are not stupid. It is a great department. I think everyone that knows us knows that,” said Killian.

Other police union officials said the charges against Gates should not have been dropped. Crowley arrested the professor for disorderly conduct after neighbours saw him and a taxi driver attempting to force the jammed front door of his home. Gates said he showed identification and asked Crowley for his name and badge number because he did not like the way he was spoken to. The professor accused the policeman of racial profiling and apparently raised his voice.

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Jennifer Donahue: Jay-Z: “Every Step You Take, They Remind You, You Ghetto”

The problem isn’t so much what happened with Crowley and Gates. A greater problem is the divide between famous and easily identifiable people of color and those with no defense.

Obama invites professor and sergeant for beer to end racial row

In a bid to diffuse the controversial racial row following his remark in the arrest of a Black Harvard professor, US President Barack Obama has telephoned and invited the White Sergeant and the professor to the White House for a beer.
“My impression of him was that he was an outstanding police -officer and a [...]

American police unions demand apology from Obama

President Barack Obama has been urged by American police unions to tender an apology after he accused an officer of “acting stupidly” by arresting leading Black scholar, Professor Henry Louis Gates.
Police representatives queued up at a press conference to insist race had played no part in the incident and the president should retract his [...]

Youth Radio — Youth Media International: Drinking Past Racial Profiling: Obama and the Gates Arrest

Originally published on Youthradio.org, the premier source for youth generated news throughout the globe. By: King Anyi Howell Pundits lampooned President Obama for his comments…

Obama invites police officer for beer

President attempts to defuse growing controversy about sergeant’s arrest of black history professor

Barack Obama today phoned the white policeman he said “acted stupidly” in arresting a black Harvard professor in his own home and invited the officer to visit the White House as the president attempted to defuse a growing race row over the incident.

Obama revealed he made the five-minute phone call to Sergeant James Crowley shortly after police unions demanded an apology from the president for saying the police in Cambridge, Massachusetts “acted stupidly” in arresting Henry Louis Gates on charges of disorderly conduct after the officer responded to a report of a suspected burglary.

The president said he should have chosen his words more carefully but stopped short of an apology. “Because this has been ratcheting up and I helped to contribute to ratcheting it up, I want to make it clear that in my choice of words I unfortunately gave the impression I was maligning the Cambridge police department and Sergeant Crowley and I could have calibrated those words differently,” he said.

Seeking to lighten the situation further, he said at the daily White House briefing that he had invited both Crowley and Gates for “a beer here in the White House”.

However, the president also said he felt both men could have handled the situation better.

Earlier, Steve Killian, president of the Cambridge police patrol officers’ association, denied that race was a factor in the arrest and demanded an apology from Obama and the state governor, Deval Patrick, who is African-American and had described the arrest as “every black man’s nightmare”.

“Cambridge police are not stupid. It is a great department. I think everyone that knows us knows that,” said Killian.

Other police union officials said the charges against Gates should not have been dropped. Crowley arrested the professor for disorderly conduct after neighbours saw him and a black taxi driver attempting to force the jammed front door of his home. Gates said he showed identification and asked Crowley for his name and badge number because he did not like the way he was spoken to. The professor accused the policeman of racial profiling and apparently raised his voice.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Keith Boykin: White Men Can’t Judge

The most disturbing aspect of the news coverage about Henry Louis Gates’s arrest has been the running commentary by white men about appropriate decorum for…