The Columbus Dispatch

Playing politics with crime is game only criminals win

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seeing various politician­s and pundits hold up Chicago’s gun violence, not so much to help resolve the crisis as to use it as a bullhorn to shame their adversarie­s.

Chicago is not alone in receiving this president’s wrath. Three days earlier, Mcenany scolded reporters for asking a series of questions about a tweet the president sent about NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace, but not one question about violence that had taken the lives of children in New York and Atlanta, among other cities. Then she quickly left the stage without taking further questions.

Criticism of crime in Chicago, the adopted hometown of his predecesso­r Barack Obama, is a tune that Trump has been playing since his candidate days. I, for one, am still waiting for him to reveal the plan that he used to claim repeatedly had been revealed to him by an unnamed high-ranking Chicago police officer to solve Chicago’s violent crime problem “immediatel­y.”

Still waiting.

Mcenany made clear which side she and the president for whom she speaks were on when she chastised the “growing criticism of America’s police” and cited a Rasmussen poll from June. It found 64% of Americans are concerned that the growing criticism of America’s police will lead to a shortage of police officers and reduce public safety in the community where they live.

Of that number, she also noted, 67% of Black Americans are worried about public safety in their neighborho­ods, which was a few points higher than whites and other minority groups.

That part should be a no-brainer. Of course Black Americans are worried about public safety. But we’re also concerned, as any other group would be, about the disproport­ionate numbers of allegation­s of racial bias and “systemic racism.”

What is “systemic racism”? I often use the example of the George Floyd video. If Derek Chauvin, the officer charged with killing Floyd, was motivated by racism — as many observers suspect based on the video — the three other officers who failed to stop him might be examples of systemic racism, a system that leads to cooperatio­n and cover-up of allegedly racist acts.

Similar suspicions welled up around video of Laquan Mcdonald, 17, an African American fatally shot in 2014 by now-former Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke. Three other officers were charged but not convicted of trying to cover up the offense, an offense in keeping with the “blue wall of silence,” an unofficial oath of camaraderi­e often described as “Cops don’t rat on other cops.”

I understand. Police work is dangerous. Self-sacrifice and group loyalty are powerful necessitie­s in such a dangerous job. But as an FBI agent who testified against a Texas police officer in the fatal shooting of a Black teenager wrote last year, “our first loyalty is to the law. Bad officers make maintainin­g that loyalty unnecessar­ily tough for everyone.”

They make life unnecessar­ily tough for civilians, who too often hesitate to call or cooperate with police, even though cooperatio­n of victims and witnesses is essential for effective crime fighting.

That’s why we also mourn Treja Kelley, an 18-year-old expectant mother who was fatally shot last year after testifying against a man charged with killing her 17-year-old cousin.

Witnesses need to be protected so communitie­s can be protected. Some politician­s love to pit groups against each other, but policing calls for cooperatio­n on all sides.

Clarence Page is a member of the Chicago Tribune Editorial Board. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com.

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