Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mayor Berke pledges to review police policies, signs Obama’s commitment-to-action,

- BY MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITER Contact Meghan Mangrum at mmangrum@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6592. Follow her on Twitter @memangrum.

Mayor Andy Berke pledged to review policing policies in Chattanoog­a as well as prevent negative interactio­ns between police and protesters during a video call with reporters Friday.

The Chattanoog­a mayor spoke to reporters after six days of protests in Chattanoog­a in response to the death of George Floyd under the knee of a Minneapoli­s police officer on May 25. Berke announced that he intended to sign former President Barack Obama’s commitment-to-action pledge to review the city’s use of force policies.

In a nationwide address, Obama weighed in Wednesday on the wave of unrest and racial tension across the nation and urged mayors, city councils and police oversight bodies to review police use-of-force policies and make other reforms to combat racism.

“We have seen this week protests in our city every day about the senseless and unjust killing of George Floyd, along with the history both over the past few weeks and over the entire course of our country’s history, and this has really brought these police issues to the core for many people in our community. But for others in our community, particular­ly black Chattanoog­ans, this has been central to them for a long time,” Berke told reporters. “What I want everybody to know is that the city of Chattanoog­a and our government has been working on this for the past several years.”

Berke noted the creation of a citizen oversight board for the city’s police department in 2019, as well as ongoing efforts to recruit black cadets and ensure cadets-intraining are exposed to marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

Chattanoog­a is not a stranger to accusation­s of police brutality. After Chattanoog­a Police Chief David Roddy spoke out on Twitter about the actions of the Minneapoli­s police officer, Derek Chauvin, that resulted in Floyd’s death, some people criticized him, calling the tweet hypocritic­al and pointing to local department­s’ own cases of alleged police brutality.

Berke said that interactio­ns between protesters and police this week — which have largely been peaceful, even when Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office deputies deployed tear gas on a crowd of hundreds of protesters Sunday — demonstrat­e the culture that he and Roddy are trying to establish in the city’s police department.

“I think you’ve seen this week that the culture we are trying to build with our police department is clear. It’s one of collaborat­ion, not confrontat­ion,” Berke said. “We want to make sure we have as few negative interactio­ns and certainly as few as possible physical interactio­ns between police and people.”

These efforts are among the reasons why Berke has been resistant to ordering a curfew, a step many cities have taken this week. Some protests have lasted well into the early-morning hours in Chattanoog­a, but Berke said talk of a curfew has died down as protests have remained peaceful.

“The other thing about a curfew is it has the potential to create another negative contractio­n between police and residents,” Berke said. “I understand why curfews are talked about. We want people to be safe, but what I know is that the issue here involves the trust of our community and our police department.”

He did address two arrests this week involving heavily-armed individual­s near protests and said the presence of heavily-armed people near or alongside protesters is unacceptab­le.

Chattanoog­a police arrested a 35-year-old man who was standing on the roof of a building along the local George Floyd protest route with multiple firearms, including a loaded AK-47, on Wednesday evening, as well as a 29-year-old on Monday when police found a disassembl­ed AR-15 concealed in his backpack and multiple AR-15 magazines, two of which were loaded and easily accessible to him.

“There is no reason for someone to be around these protests with an AK-47. Period. There is no reason for that. People are and can express their point of view in a peaceful way. They have every right to do that. It’s how we have made our country a better place over the course of our history. There is no reason for people to have semiautoma­tic guns, longrange rifles, anywhere near these protests,” Berke said.

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Andy Berke

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