Dayton Daily News

Cleveland police chief on the scene to keep peace,

‘I don’t stand by. I’m still a police officer,’ says city’s top cop.

- By Mark Gillispie and Michael R. Sisak

Cleveland CLEVELAND — Police Chief Calvin Williams was never far from the action during the Republican convention, taking charge when a flag-burning turned into a melee, wading into the crowd when demonstrat­ors nearly came to blows and joining bicycle officers on patrol.

“I don’t stand by. I’m still a police officer. I’m out there to make sure nothing happens,” he said amid the fourday political gathering that focused the eyes of the world on him and his 1,500-member department.

The convention represente­d a stern test for the Cleveland police force: Fears of violence were running high during this mean summer of racially charged bloodshed in the U.S. and extremist attacks abroad. And the department has a troubled history when it comes to restraint and the use of force against minorities.

On Wednesday afternoon, 17 people were arrested during a melee that authoritie­s said erupted after a member of a revolution­ary group tried to burn a flag and instead set himself on fire. Two officers suffered slight injuries.

That brought to 23 the number of people arrested during the convention, well below the many hundreds some feared.

“Right now, I think so far, so good,” Williams said Wednesday night. “We’re still out there, we’re still vigilant, to make sure we finish this day and the last day tomorrow on a positive note.”

City officials were hoping for a mostly trouble-free convention to help repair the reputation of the Cleveland police, who are operating under federal supervisio­n after a U.S. Justice Department investigat­ion found a pattern of excessive force and violations of people’s civil rights.

In 2012, Cleveland police killed two unarmed black people in a 137-bullet barrage after a car chase that began when officers mistook engine backfire for gunshots. Two years later, Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old African-American, was killed by a white officer while playing with what turned out to be a pellet gun.

While the Secret Service was responsibl­e for security at the convention hall itself, Williams — a 52-year-old black man who has been chief for 2½ years — was in charge of the rest of Cleveland, with help from thousands of local, state and federal law enforcemen­t officers.

Instead of holing up at headquarte­rs or a command center, Williams was often close to the action out on the streets.

On Tuesday, when a menacing crowd closed in around right-wing radio host Alex Jones in the city’s Public Square, Williams himself waded in and hustled Jones away to an SUV.

Later that day, the chief broke up a gathering of what he called “hooligans” wearing bandannas over their faces.

And he spent three hours riding with bicycle officers on patrol that night.

On Wednesday, he was at the site of the flag-burning melee, trying to restore order and personally checking convention delegates’ credential­s to help usher them past the chaos and into the arena.

The department also relied heavily on 300 bicycle cops, who were highly mobile yet not as intimidati­ng as officers in cruisers. The bicycle officers literally kept protesters in line, turning their bikes sideways to keep opposing protest groups apart.

Sixteen-year-old Hashime Hill, of Cleveland, approached Williams as the chief was making his rounds Wednesday afternoon.

“I like him because he’s an active chief,” the teenager said. “He comes out of the office and he talks to the people. He gets to understand. He asks us what’s going on. ... He’s cool.”

Some protesters, too, had praise for the police during the opening days of the convention.

Jesse Gonzalez, 26, of Lakewood, Ohio, carried a rifle on the Public Square while wearing a camouflage-style “Make America Great Again” hat, taking advantage of Ohio’s open carry law. Williams said police officers approached those carrying guns to let them know what was expected of them.

Gonzalez said he had “really, really super-friendly conversati­ons” with officers inquiring about the type of weapon he had, and described them as “really profession­al.”

“I’m very happy that everything’s been so civil, despite all the shouting,” he said.

 ?? WHITNEY CURTIS / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams (right) moves through the crowd speaking with people gathered at Public Square on day three of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland.
WHITNEY CURTIS / NEW YORK TIMES Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams (right) moves through the crowd speaking with people gathered at Public Square on day three of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

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