Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Some Pittsburgh police officers don’t like that Chief Cameron McLay spoke at the DNC.

FOP president attacks chief’s DNC talk

- By Karen Kane

Pittsburgh police Chief Cameron McLay said he was pleased to receive an invitation to speak at the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday night because it was an opportunit­y to speak on a subject about which he is passionate: police and community relations.

Fraternal Order of Police president Robert Swartzweld­er said Wednesday his boss committed a misstep and should face disciplina­ry action perhaps as severe as dismissal for what the union leader deems an obvious violation of the municipal code.

“Anyone who believes in any way, shape or form that the DNC is not a political campaign is an idiot,” he said, referring to a provision in the municipal code that prohibits campaignin­g by police in uniform: “No officer or employee of the Department of Police shall campaign for a candidate for any office or for a ballot issue while on duty, while wearing a uniform or while on City property. Nor may he/she identify himself/herself as an employee of the Department of Police.”

At the DNC on Tuesday, Chief McLay was introduced as the Pittsburgh police chief, and he was in uniform.

But, at a media briefing Wednesday afternoon, Chief McLay disputed that his speech constitute­d campaignin­g — though he acknowledg­ed the content was reviewed by “profession­al campaign writers” and was edited to reduce its content by about half. He said he didn’t know if the campaign writers worked for Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton or the Democratic Party.

The purpose in accepting the invitation to speak at the DNC, the chief said, was to talk about “what meaningful police reform should look like.” He said he also wanted to make the point that “my cops do a great job.”

If the FOP president is upset, the chief said he will discuss the issue with him.

Witold Walczak, the legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia, said he had no problems with Chief McLay’s speech or his appearance at the DNC.

“He’s not endorsing a candidate. He was promoting a view of policing used in Pittsburgh and that he believes could be a model for the nation,” Mr. Walczak said.

The Democrats, he continued, invited Chief McLay because he is someone who embraces a view of policing that they support.

“As we all sit here today, we don’t know who he’s endorsing,” Mr. Walczak said.

The matter appears unlikely to gain traction with the chief’s bosses. Mayor Bill Peduto’s chief of staff, Kevin Acklin, said in a statement that there was no violation of the city code.

“We are aware of the restrictio­ns under city code and we explicitly required that his remarks were not political as a condition of his appearance. Chief McLay was invited by the convention to tell the nation about the efforts of the Pittsburgh Police force toward building stronger community relations, and he did not campaign for any candidate. There was no mention of any candidate in his remarks, he did not express support for any candidate, and we are proud that he celebrated the efforts of our police officers on a national stage.”

Officer Swartzweld­er vehemently countered the point. “The DNC is there to endorse a candidate. You’re living under a rock if you don’t see that,” he said.

He believes the chief should be discipline­d, and he said he will raise the issue every time one of his union members faces disciplina­ry action.

“The mayor is endorsing violation of the municipal code,” he said.

In June, Allegheny County officials asked Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump’s campaign to stop using a photograph of the candidate with county police in a mass email distributi­on. The email featured photograph­s from his campaign trail, including an image of Mr. Trump surrounded by about a dozen local public safety workers, including several county police officers. The photo was taken during a stop by Mr. Trump at Pittsburgh Internatio­nal Airport.

At the time, Coleman McDonough, the department’s newly appointed superinten­dent, said the photo should not have appeared in the email. But he said there was no violation of policy by officers, saying the campaign was responsibl­e.

Mr. Walczak said the situation with Mr. Trump and his use of the photograph with county officers is different.

“They were being used in a clearly partisan campaign promotion for Trump, and it was done unwittingl­y by the cops,” Mr. Walczak said. “He snapped that photo and used it without their permission.

“It was problemati­c at all levels.”

 ?? Gracey Evans/Post-Gazette ?? Pittsburgh police Chief Cameron McLay speaks Wednesday about his appearance at the Democratic National Convention.
Gracey Evans/Post-Gazette Pittsburgh police Chief Cameron McLay speaks Wednesday about his appearance at the Democratic National Convention.
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