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Thursday, February 12, 2015

FBI Director James Comey's Georgetown Address: Insight, Eloquence And Candor

FBI Director James Comey tackled the topic of race and law enforcement at Georgetown University in Washington on Thursday.
FBI Director James Comey tackled the topic of race and law enforcement at Georgetown University in Washington on Thursday.
Alan: I am struck by Comey's insight, eloquence and candor. You can hear him speak in the link immediately below.  
                            NPR: FBI Director James Comey Wades Into Contentious Debate Over Policing And Race

Excerpt from Comey's Georgetown speech: "It's ridiculous that I can't tell you how many people were shot by police in this country - last week, last month, last year the last decade. It's ridiculous."

FBI Director Faces 'Hard Truths' Of Policing Minority Communities


There's a reason why new agents are required to visit the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial during their training, says FBI Director James Comey. It's the same reason he keeps on his desk a copy of Attorney General Robert Kennedy's one-page approval of a request to wiretap King: "To ensure that we remember our mistakes and that we learn from them." 

In a speech on law enforcement and race Thursday at Georgetown University, Comey shared his thoughts on improving policing in minority communities. The director acknowledged there's a disconnect between federal and local law enforcement, and communities of color and said that debating the nature of policing is important.

"We can roll up our car windows, turn up the radio and drive around these problems," he said. "Or instead we can choose to have an open and honest discussion about what our relationship is today, what it should be, what it could be, what it needs to be if we took more time to better understand one another."
















Comey disagrees with the notion of racial colorblindness, and said everyone carries racial biases that affect behavior. But he stressed recognizing these hard truths are important to creating effective relationships with vulnerable communities.

"We must speak the truth about our shortcomings as law enforcement and fight to get better," he said. "But as a country we must also speak the truth to ourselves. Law enforcement is not the root cause of the problems in our hardest hit neighborhoods."

More Than Training Needed

In a statement, the Center for Policing Equity applauded the director for his remarks: "We are proud to be a part of many of the initiatives Director Comey mentioned today, working alongside the Department of Justice, the Administration, and municipal police departments across the country to better equip our law enforcement officials."

Nicholas Manley, a graduate student at Georgetown, was impressed by the director's speech. He agrees that facilitating better relationships between police and communities of color require more than just better training.

"It's a two-sided equation," he says. "We also have a community that has grown up being told that the boogeyman is the man with the patch."

Manley also thinks improving minority outreach requires changes to FBI recruitment.

"I would like to hear him have a plan for how he's going to allow the average person to be employed by the FBI," he says. "Someone who grew up in the projects is not going to meet those requirements for law enforcement."

Does This Go Far Enough?
Twitter users shared their reactions using the hashtag #ComeyAtGU. Responses were mixed, with some saying the director's speech doesn't go far enough in addressing an often hostile presence by police in communities of color.
"Don't confuse 'community policing' with militarized police patrolling," Suzette Gardner tweeted.


There's Never Been A Safer Time For Cops Nor A More Dangerous Time For Criminals

Alan: The following tweet does not "appear" in this "paste." The first two sentences quote Comey, followed by the tweeter's commentary: "Hard to hate up close. Cops need to get out of cars. Sounds like troops need to get out of MRAPs." No. It does not sound like "the troops need to get out of MRAPs." Rather, the author sounds like a militarized white guy, immersed in paranoia assuming that the nation's streets are as dangerous as war zones when in fact American police are safer than they've ever been - and not because they're staying in their "iron-clad" cars. Notably the two cops killed in NYC two months ago were sitting in their cars, lulled by a false sense of security, far less agile and responsive than they would have been standing up and "out in the open." Same goes for Darren Wilson who was essentially trapped in his patrol car when Michael Brown reached through the window, pissed off by Wilson's bossy reaction to his jaywalking.
Brian Philipps, a freshman at Georgetown who also attended the speech, says creating permanent change goes beyond just talking about it. "You can give all the speeches you want, and I think they're good I think they're necessary." he said. "But I have faith in Director Comey to institute the changes he's talking about."
Comey closed by saying America isn't perfect and that there is hard work to be done. He said law enforcement officials and communities must be willing to work together. "It's a matter of morality and effectiveness," he concluded.

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