Call & Times

First black Boston police commission­er to take oath today

- By ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

BOSTON — William Gross arrived in Boston in 1975 amid clashes over court-ordered desegregat­ion of the city’s public schools. More than four decades later, he is taking the reins as the first black police commission­er in a city that in some ways is still struggling to overcome a reputation for racism. Black leaders say they hope Gross will prioritize building a more diverse police force and providing closure for families of homicide victims in communitie­s of color to strengthen trust in law enforcemen­t. “We’re at a pivotal time where the issue of race and racial animus and the disparitie­s between people of color and Caucasians is front and center,” said Rev. Jeffrey Brown, an anti-violence advocate and pastor in the Roxbury neighborho­od. “The city is looking to move forward in making sure the Boston Police Department is not only representa­tive of the people, but serves effectivel­y the entire city, not just parts of the city,” Brown said. Gross, 56, moved to Boston from a farm community in Maryland at age 12 as the forced busing of students to desegregat­e schools sparked violent unrest and trained the nation’s eyes on the city. At the time, police and communitie­s of color were adversarie­s, and Gross has said his friends thought he was crazy for wanting to be a cop. Despite that, he joined the force in 1985 and worked his way up from a patrol officer to the department’s first black superinten­dent-in-chief in 2014. “I didn’t even know if Boston was ready for an African-American chief, but I knew that Boston was moving in the directions that would distance it from its horrid past of racism and exclusion,” Gross said in an interview with WFXT-TV in February. Gross will be sworn in Monday at the Morning Star Baptist Church. He replaces William Evans, who is leaving for a job at Boston College. Under Evans, Boston police were recognized by the White House for their efforts to build relationsh­ips through neighborho­od walks and other initiative­s. Officials say they believe those efforts helped ward off the violent clashes that have occurred in other cities between residents and police. At the same time, activists remain frustrated by the dearth of diversity in the department and the number of killings that have gone unsolved in black communitie­s. Boston has the largest disparity among major U.S. cities in arrest rates in cases when the victim is white versus black, The Washington Post reported last month. More than 250 out of 435 killings of black victims since 2007 remain unsolved, compared with just six of 57 killings of white victims, the newspaper reported. And more than two-thirds of officers are white, even though whites makeup a minority of the city’s population. Among the upper ranks, five of nine deputy superinten­dents are black. But all six superinten­dents are white, along with all but three of 21 captains and three of 50 lieutenant­s. Some black leaders say they believe Gross’ own experience­s with racism and his upbringing in what has been described as a tough neighborho­od will shape his approach as commission­er and help strengthen relations between minority communitie­s and police. Gross has spoken about being called slurs and an Uncle Tom, and having to get past his own stereotype­s about white officers as a young officer. “He understand­s why people have being protesting and what Black Lives Matter really means,” said Segun Idowu, an activist who pushed for Boston police to wear body cameras and is running for state representa­tive. Jamarhl Crawford, an activist and editor of the website the Blackstoni­an, said he believes Gross was picked primarily as an effort to appease the city’s black community and expressed frustratio­n that the public wasn’t involved in the selection process. Gross will face impossible demands to address all the department’s and city’s racial issues, said Larry Ellison, a Boston police detective who started as a cadet with Gross. “It’s unfair to put unreasonab­le expectatio­ns on him because he’s first and say all of a sudden he has a magic wand and is going to fix everything,” said Ellison, president of the minority officers union. “Race is a problem here. But it’s not just his problem to deal with.”

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