Boston Herald

Bloomberg: ‘stop and frisk’ was wrong

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WASHINGTON — Michael Bloomberg on Sunday apologized for his longstandi­ng support of the controvers­ial “stop-andfrisk” police strategy ahead of a potential Democratic presidenti­al run, a practice that he embraced as New York’s mayor and continued to defend despite its disproport­ionate impact on people of color.

Addressing a black church in Brooklyn, Bloomberg said he was “sorry” and acknowledg­ed it often led to the detention of blacks and Latinos.

“I can’t change history,” Bloomberg told the congregati­on. “However today, I want you to know that I realize back then I was wrong.”

Bloomberg’s reversal is notable for someone who is often reluctant to admit wrongdoing. It’s also a recognitio­n that if he’s to compete for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, he’ll have to win support from black voters.

The apology, however, was received skepticall­y by many activists who noted that it was made as he is taking steps to enter the race.

“It is convenient that Bloomberg suddenly apologizes but has done nothing to undo the immense damage he has caused on countless lives,” said activist DeRay Mckesson. “His apology is not accepted.”

Stop-and-frisk gave police wide authority to detain people they suspected of committing a crime, and Bloomberg aggressive­ly pursued the tactic when he first took over as mayor in 2002.

Police claimed people were only targeted if officers had a reasonable suspicion they were breaking the law. But while the searches did lead to weapons being confiscate­d, the overwhelmi­ng majority of people who were detained and frisked were let go because they hadn’t done anything wrong.

Many men found the encounters degrading, and statistics showed minorities were far more likely to be subjected to such a search.

“Under Bloomberg, NYPD increased stop and frisk from 100,000 stops to nearly 700,000 stops per year. 90% of those impacted were people of color — overwhelmi­ngly black and brown men,” black activist Samuel Sinyangwe tweeted on Sunday. “Bloomberg personally has the money to begin paying reparation­s for this harm. ‘Sorry’ isn’t enough.”

Though crime had fallen sharply when he took office, he said there were still 650 murders in the city in 2001.

“I was not going to accept that — and I didn’t,” Bloomberg said. “I was determined to improve police-community relations while at the same time reducing crime even further.”

But the practice had unforeseen consequenc­es, he acknowledg­ed.

“The fact is, far too many innocent people were being stopped while we tried to do that. The overwhelmi­ng majority of them were black and Latino,” he said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? FRISKY BUSINESS: Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Sunday his is sorry that the ‘stop and frisk’ policy he supported as mayor disproport­ionally impacted blacks and Latinos, admitting it was wrong.
AP FILE FRISKY BUSINESS: Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Sunday his is sorry that the ‘stop and frisk’ policy he supported as mayor disproport­ionally impacted blacks and Latinos, admitting it was wrong.

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