Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

‘Respect’ in policing is a two-way street, Attorney General Barr

- Clarence Page Clarence Page, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs at www.chicagotri­bune.com/pagespage. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

Remember when candidate Donald Trump sought black votes by asking somewhat sarcastica­lly, “What do you have to lose?” One answer now comes from President Trump’s chosen attorney general: How about your police protection?

At a Justice Department awards ceremony to honor outstandin­g police officers Tuesday, Attorney General William Barr called on Americans to recognize the “sacrifice and service that is given by our law enforcemen­t officers” and “to start showing, more than they do, the respect and support that law enforcemen­t deserves.”

But then he said something that jerked me alert, and I was not alone. “If communitie­s don’t give that support and respect,” he continued, “they might find themselves without the police protection they need.”

Say what? Efforts by journalist­s to get some clarificat­ion from the Justice Department of which “communitie­s” he was talking about were not successful, but I was not alone in hearing his remarks as a thinly veiled threat to “black communitie­s” — such places as

Chicago, Baltimore, St. Louis and Ferguson, Missouri, that have been the scene of major protests against alleged police misconduct.

Given Barr’s reputation as a fierce enforcer of his president’s “get tough” authoritar­ian policies — much like Jeff Sessions, Trump’s previous attorney general — I didn’t expect much more from him.

But respect is a two-way street. As a firm believer in the First Amendment’s right to “petition the government a redress of grievances,” I’d like to remind our attorney general that communitie­s tend to respect people who respect them.

Barr and other law enforcemen­t officials who would withhold equal rights and respect from the citizens that our police swear to serve and protect don’t make a persuasive appeal for our respect.

Barr’s analysis reminds me of Rahm Emanuel’s comment in October 2015 when he was mayor of Chicago. Speaking onstage with then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch at a national meeting of mayors and police officials, he said Chicago police officers were going “fetal” out of concern that they would get in trouble for actions during arrests, especially now in the age of cellphone video cameras.

Back in Chicago, he stood by his contention. He blamed that new tentativen­ess, induced by fear for their jobs and reputation­s, as one cause of the spike in homicides and shootings that had soared then to their highest level in decades.

At the time, the Police Department was sitting on a dashcam video of the shooting a year earlier of Laquan McDonald, a 17-year-old black youth, fatally shot by police who initially reported that the shooting was in self-defense.

After a court ordered police to release the dashcam video of the shooting in November 2015, the world could see that McDonald was stepping away from police officers, not toward them. Officer Jason Van Dyke was found guilty of seconddegr­ee murder, but three other officers tried for allegedly trying to cover up events related to the shooting were found not guilty. Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez lost her reelection bid in the fallout from the video. Emanuel, who had been reelected before the release of the video, decided not to run again.

The Justice Department issued a report on the Chicago Police Department in January 2017, the last days of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, that cited serious problems in a police culture of excessive violence, especially against minorities. The department and the city made a preliminar­y agreement to undertake broad improvemen­ts, including new police training to de-escalate confrontat­ions.

Among other reforms, Emanuel created the Chicago Police Accountabi­lity Task Force, led by then-president of the Chicago Police Board Lori Lightfoot, “to review the system of accountabi­lity, oversight and training that is currently in place for Chicago’s police officers.” Eventually a consent decree was put in place to guide courtorder­ed police reforms. This year Lightfoot was elected mayor.

Times and perception­s do change — and the approach to policing is as polarized as ever. Coincident­ally, even former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg preceded his announceme­nt of his presidenti­al campaign with an emotional apology for his “stop, question and frisk” policing policy, even though crime statistics in New York were in decline before the policy and continued to decline during and after the policy. Even with that apology, Bloomberg’s policing policy may make him toast with black voters.

Meanwhile, Trump — with Barr’s help — is sticking with his “get tough” policies, which may appeal to his base. It’s an approach I don’t think a Democrat could even afford to try.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/GETTY-AFP ?? Attorney General William Barr, left, awards Deputy Richard Hassna, from the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office in California, at a ceremony in Washington on Tuesday.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/GETTY-AFP Attorney General William Barr, left, awards Deputy Richard Hassna, from the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office in California, at a ceremony in Washington on Tuesday.
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