We Have to Start Talking to Each Other
Q. What is the impact of crime on the black community?
A. The impact is devastating. The black community has a larger proportion of crime within major metropolitan areas than any other community. The majority of that crime is black offender, black victim.
The African-American community wants strong, tough, honest, fair policing. There is no African-American community in America that does not want to see police there. The people want to be treated fairly. They want to be treated honestly and with dignity. I think that even in the city of Los Angeles, with all its strife, the people say, "Hey, wait a minute. These people are robbing and stealing and looting. They are not our community; they are not our friends. They are gang members, or they are hoodlums, and they are bums, and they belong in jail."
Crime also has a long-term effect on the community because it drives out the mom-and-pop businesses, the corner stores, where a lot of shopping is done. It drives out the source of income for the teenagers and the young adults who don't have a lot of skills or are just going to school to learn skills. It often drives out the source of income for the one or two parents who may be living and working at home and working in the area. The cost of crime in the African-American community cannot be underestimated.
Q. You have been Philadelphia's police commissioner for the past four years and plan to replace Daryl Gates in Los Angeles in July. What would you have done differently to prepare for the riots in L.A.?
A. Clearly, I cannot discuss the preparations for Los Angeles. I was not involved, and I had not had any communication out there.
But very important in terms of planning are your contacts with community people. These people are your best front line of communication. I don't care whether it is the poorest, the most crime-ridden and downtrodden neighborhood or the most successful neighborhood. The contacts can be church leaders, they can be businesspeople or a neighbor who is out there every day washing off the steps and sidewalk. Part of a commander's job is to be able to pick up the phone at 3 o'clock in the morning and say, "Bob, Mary, I need you out here," and know that they will come. Or if these community leaders need the police commander, they can call him and say, "Chief, we need you here." That is a relationship that gets built up over time. You can't wait until the fires are burning to decide, "I got to do this."
Q. It seems that a siege mentality exists between the police and some communities.
A. When you are dealing with a riot, a police officer's role really gets reduced to command, control and contain. Over the course of a career, a police officer gets involved in command and control maybe 10% of the time. The rest of the time you are responding to calls for service, whether you are dealing with disturbances, abandoned vehicles, sanitation violations or traffic control.
A lot of young men and women come into police work thinking that what they see on Miami Vice is what they are going to be doing. When it is not, a level of frustration sets in, a level of boredom, a level of miscommunication.
Q. I understand that you used the Rodney King video as a teaching tool. How did you use it, and what were you hoping to accomplish?
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