Who's Right: Henry Louis Gates or the Arresting Police Officer?
Did race play a role in the incident?
Said Henry Louis Gates, Jr. after his recent arrest: "I can't believe that an individual policeman on the Cambridge police force would treat any African-American male this way ... [or] any citizen of the United States, no matter what their race." The police report from Cambridge Officer James Crowley, however, paints a disorderly Gates, "exhibiting loud and tumultuous behavior, in a public place, directed at a uniform police officer who was present investigating a report of a crime in progress." When asked to step outside his home, Gates reportedly replied, "I'll speak with your mama outside." Who's right: Henry Louis Gates or Office James Crowley? Did race play a role in the incident? Post your thoughts.
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Reader Comments
Gates arrest
I have a son who is a police officer. If he responded to a possible burglary, and the suspect would not identify himself (except with words. Anyone could say 'I live here.', he would most certainly arrest him. And especially when the suspect became verbally abusive. He (Gates) was certainly not talking or acting like a professor, but rather like a smart aleck. He should have been arrested, and race is completeley inconsequential.
Who is right?
I am getting tired of this nonsence. Since you know who got put in office by Acorn, It seems that unless your black, you are wrong. What is wrong with this picture. It use to be of the people, by the people, and for the people, not are you black or white.
Our Country is going to hell in a hand basket, and the foreign country's don't even respect us any more.
My grandparents are rolling over in there graves. To know full on that some PEOPLE put this in the White House to run our Country. Someone who don't salute our flag, and his wife says" she is finally proud of the US." BAD,BAD,BAD.
Both are WRONG!
This is not an issue of racism at all; rather, it's an issue of ego. If you were investigating a possible burglary in progress and saw someone fitting the description of the suspect inside the home, wouldn't you be suspicious and investigate? But, once he confirmed there was no criminal activity, Officer Crowley should have left. Everyone, from a fast food cashier to a call center rep to the President, has had to deal with an irate customer or some trash talking otherwise. Out of professionalism, you hold your tongue and walk away. Resist the urge to retaliate. Officer Crowley's ego wouldn't allow it. This little old man was disrespecting his authority and embarrassing him in front of a couple of people who had gathered. He was calling him a racist, which totally offended him because, not only is he not a racist, he was hand-picked to help others control racism in the workplace. So he had to put this man in his place.
If you were a black man who lived during a time when whites, including those in authority, openly harrassed blacks due to racism and were now being treated like a criminal in your own home by a white police officer because your own white neighbor didn't recognize you, wouldn't you be defensive? But once Mr. Gates found out about the investigation, he should have cooperated with law enforcement to clear up any misunderstanding. Especially if he thought they were racist because he should not have wanted to add to the misperception and being civil and cooperative could have been doing his part to help reverse it. However, he let that three-letter word get the best of him. To himself, he said "why doesn't my neighbor know who I am? Do we all look alike? If she saw a white man pushing on the door, would she still have reported it? I didn't do anything wrong. I'm an accomplished scholar. Heck, I know the President. Yet, you want to treat me like some common criminal??" He was embarrassed and offended and acted like a pompous jerk to regain some dignity.
I hate when black people play the race card unwarranted but I also hate when white people try to pretend many of them are not still racist. Some black people take it to the nth degree and overreact or expect what's not there in some cases but it might be because they've experienced it and don't know how to differentiate it from other character flaws. Make no mistake, racism is alive and well, but Officer Crowley's actions in this case cannot be attributed to it.
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