San Diego Union-Tribune

WOMAN CHARGED IN CENTRAL PARK INCIDENT MADE SECOND 911 CALL

Falsely claimed she was assaulted by Black bird watcher

- BY TROY CLOSSON NEW YORK Closson writes for The New York Times.

Amy Cooper, the White woman who called police on a Black bird-watcher in Central Park, made a second, previously unreported call to 911 in which she falsely claimed that the man “tried to assault her,” a prosecutor said Wednesday.

“The defendant twice reported that an African American man was putting her in danger, first by stating that he was threatenin­g her and her dog, then making a second call indicating that he tried to assault her in the Ramble area of the park,” Joan Illuzzi, a senior prosecutor, said.

The second call was disclosed as Cooper appeared remotely in Manhattan Criminal Court to answer a misdemeano­r charge of filing a false police report, which carries a maximum sentence of a year in jail.

Cooper had been charged in July, and no additional charges were announced Wednesday. Illuzzi said the Manhattan district attorney’s office was negotiatin­g a possible plea deal with Cooper that would allow her to avoid jail.

The hearing was the latest developmen­t in the Memorial Day weekend encounter that resonated across the country and reignited discussion­s about the potential danger of false accusation­s made to police about Black people.

Cooper was filmed calling 911 from an isolated area in Central Park after a Black man asked her to leash her dog, as the rules required. During the first call, she said multiple times that an “African American man” was threatenin­g her, emphasizin­g his race to the operator as she raised her voice franticall­y.

Video of the encounter, shot by the man, Christian Cooper, on his phone, has been viewed nearly 45 million times. Its timing, one day before protests erupted nationwide over the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, only deepened its role in sparking outrage over what many viewed as an example of everyday racism. (Amy Cooper is not related to Christian Cooper.)

But prosecutor­s said Cooper made a later call to 911, which was not shown in the video. In that call, Cooper told the dispatcher that Christian Cooper had tried to assault her, according to a criminal complaint.

When police arrived, however, Cooper told an officer that her reports were untrue and that Christian Cooper had not touched or assaulted her, the complaint said.

The criminal complaint mentioned two calls, but charged her with only one count.

Illuzzi told the court that Cooper had used police in a way that was “both racially offensive and designed to intimidate,” and that her actions were “something that can’t be ignored.”

Still, the prosecutor said the district attorney’s office was exploring a resolution to the case that would require Cooper to take responsibi­lity for her actions in court and attend a program to educate her on how harmful they were.

“We hope this process will enlighten, heal and prevent similar harm to our community in the future,” Illuzzi said.

Judge Nicholas Moyne adjourned the case until Nov. 17 to give Cooper’s lawyer, Robert Barnes, and prosecutor­s time to work out the details of an agreement.

“We will hold people who make false and racist 911 calls accountabl­e,” the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., said in a statement Wednesday. “Fortunatel­y, no one was injured or killed in the police response to Ms. Cooper’s hoax.”

Barnes said in July that Cooper would be found not guilty if the case went to trial and criticized what he called a “cancel culture epidemic.”

“How many lives are we going to destroy over misunderst­ood 60-second videos on social media?” he asked. Barnes declined to comment Wednesday.

As the episode gained widespread attention across the country, Cooper, who had been a head of insurance portfolio management at Franklin Templeton, lost her job and was publicly shamed. She also surrendere­d her dog temporaril­y to the rescue group from which she had adopted it.

 ?? CHRISTIAN COOPER AP ?? Video provided by Christian Cooper shows Amy Cooper with her dog before she filed a false report about their encounter in New York’s Central Park.
CHRISTIAN COOPER AP Video provided by Christian Cooper shows Amy Cooper with her dog before she filed a false report about their encounter in New York’s Central Park.

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