During the Republican National Convention, reporter Alice Speri and videographer Dan Peters examined the other side of Cleveland / The Intercept
Three weeks after the Republican National Convention, Cleveland officials and residents are back to work on a task more daunting than hosting that event: reforming the city’s troubled police department.
When delegates and visitors left Cleveland last month, city officials sighed in relief. The massive street protests many had predicted failed to materialize, and the military equipment the city had acquired was left untouched. In total, 24 people were arrested — too many, according to both Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams and legal observers — but significantly fewer than everyone expected.
Visitors left Cleveland with the image of friendly, helpful police officers patrolling the city on bikes and horses, and with an approach to protest that seemed exemplary, if untested by larger numbers of protesters. “All-in-all, it was a great week that was successful on every level,” city officials wrote in a self-congratulatory statement the day after the convention officially wrapped. “We got a chance to show everyone what Cleveland is all about and why we are a great city.”
But the bigger test for city officials will be convincing their own residents — many of whom stayed away from downtown during the convention and have a long list of grievances about policing in their communities — that Cleveland can be great for them too.
Last week, Cleveland’s City Council drafted a proposal to amend the composition of the civilian review board tasked with reviewing use-of-force complaints made against officers. The proposal is part of a series of reforms the city is beginning to discuss in the aftermath of a scathing Department of Justice investigation that found it engaged in a pattern of excessive force and lacked accountability, training, and adequate engagement with the community.
The December 2014 report came just days after a police officer shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice within two seconds of arriving at the park where he was holding a fake gun. The federal civil rights investigation, which was ongoing at the time of Rice’s death, followed a series of other incidents, including a 2012 police chase that ended with officers firing 137 shots into a car, killing Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams. Police believed they had seen a weapon in the car, but no weapon was ever recovered. Only one of 13 officers who shot at the car, Michael Brelo, was charged. His acquittal in May 2015 led to large protests against Cleveland police and mass arrests. No officers were charged with Tamir Rice’s death.
The DOJ investigation eventually led to a consent decree settlement with the city of Cleveland, which among other things instituted the Cleveland Community Police Commission, a body made up mostly of civilians tasked with drawing reform plans for the city.
But the commission said that the city declined to follow its recommendations for a more comprehensive revision of the civilian review board — a sign, to some, that changes to Cleveland policing will be slow and challenging.
In July, as the Republican convention took place downtown, and as the nation once again confronted growing tensions between police and communities of color, The Intercept traveled to the neighborhood where Tamir Rice lived and died to meet some of the people most impacted by the failures of Cleveland police, and some of those working to change the department.
“reforming the city’s troubled police department.”
THE POLICE ARE NOT THE REAL ISSUE! Poverty and hopelessness is.
If you can’t give them hope (ala Trump), then force them to get up early and do some sort of pretend work, if no real work is available.
Give them some self respect and the Police issue will dissolve.
absolutely
So tell me how poverty and hopelessness is to blame for the police firing 137 shots into a car with only two unarmed passengers, killing both. Or for the police rushing into an Ohio Walmart and gunning down a customer who was holding a toy gun, with the barrel pointing toward the ground, and chatting on his cell phone. Stop the BS about poverty and hopelessness causing these deaths! The police aren’t poor and hopeless. They shoot first and make up their stories later. And why not? It seems to work very well for them.
This attitude of ignoring the real problem and victim blaming is a large part of why this pattern of abusive behavior continues.
“If I cover my own eyes, I can’t see you – therefore you obviously can’t exist.” #Peekaboo
“THE POLICE ARE NOT THE REAL ISSUE! Poverty and hopelessness is.”There is a lot of poverty and hopelessness in the rest of the world, but do not have the same issues as the USA. I believe the problem is more fundamental, and I do not believe that this is all police departments in America, but it is a basic lack of understanding of human dignity and universal human rights regardless of creed and color by certain police forces.
A license to kill was given to the israeli IDF by Adolf Netanyahu. A similar pattern of monster is being attempted in the US.