Baltimore Mayor Fires Police Commissioner Anthony Batts

Discussion in 'Free Speech Alley' started by LSUDad, Jul 8, 2015.

  1. LSUDad

    LSUDad Veteran Member

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    Baltimore mayor fires police commissioner amid homicide rise
    Posted: Jul 08, 2015 3:13 PM CST Updated: Jul 08, 2015 7:44 PM CST

    [​IMG] Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake has fired Police Commissioner Anthony Batts. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky) By JULIET LINDERMAN
    Associated Press
    BALTIMORE (AP) - Baltimore's mayor fired the troubled city's police commissioner Wednesday, saying that a recent spike in homicides in the weeks after an unarmed black man died of injuries in police custody required a change in leadership.

    Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake thanked Police Commissioner Anthony Batts for his service - and praised the job he had done - but said growing criticism of his performance had become a "distraction" that was preventing the city from moving ahead.

    Deputy Police Commissioner Kevin Davis, who has only been with the department since January, will serve as interim commissioner, Rawlings-Blake said.

    "We need a change," the mayor told a news conference, which was attended by Davis. "This was not an easy decision but it is one that is in the best interest of Baltimore. The people of Baltimore deserve better and we're going to get better."

    The firing comes 2 1/2 months after the city broke out in riots following the death of Freddie Gray, who died in April of injuries he received in police custody. Six police officers have been criminally charged in Gray's death.

    After the unrest, arrests in the city plummeted and homicides spiked. Baltimore's homicide total this year is 155, according to police. That's a 48 percent increase compared with the same time last year. Shootings have increased 86 percent. In one of the latest examples, gunmen jumped out of two vans and fired at a group of people a few blocks from an urban university campus Tuesday night, killing three people.

    Police said Wednesday that the shooting wasn't random, but no arrests have been made.

    "As we have seen in recent weeks, too many continue to die on our streets," Rawlings-Blake said. Referring to Batts, she said "recent events proved that his being here was a distraction."

    "We cannot continue to debate the leadership of the department," the mayor said. "We cannot continue to have the level of violence we've seen in recent weeks in this city."

    Batts and Rawlings-Blake are African-American, as is the city's top prosecutor, Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby. Davis is white. Sixty percent of the city's population is black, while the police department is 48 percent African-American.

    Mosby said her office has already met with Davis and she looks forward to working with him.

    The Rev. Alvin Gwynn Sr., president of the city's Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance, said the firing was long overdue. Gwynn, who began calling for Batts' resignation within days of Gray's death, blamed the bloody spike in violence on the mayor's previous reluctance to fire the commissioner.

    "We have people who died because they delayed," he said Wednesday.

    Keonna Stokes, 22, a resident of the housing development in front of which Gray was arrested, said she was glad to see Batts removed from his position, and hopes a new commissioner will have a lower tolerance for police misconduct.

    "The police wouldn't do the things they do if the commissioner didn't allow it," she said. "He should have been fired. We call the police when we really need them, when people hurt us. But now we don't call them, because they hurt us. If they didn't Freddie would still be here."

    The U.S. Justice Department is conducting a civil rights review of the department, and on Tuesday, Batts announced that an outside organization will review the police response to the civil unrest that followed Gray's death. Most of the unrest took place on April 27, prompted by Gray's death on April 19.

    The Baltimore police union released its own scathing post-mortem report Tuesday accusing Batts and other top brass of instructing officers not to engage with rioters and to allow looting and destruction to occur.

    "The officers repeatedly expressed concern that the passive response of the Baltimore police commanders to the civil unrest allowed the disorder to grow into full-scale rioting," Gene Ryan, president of the Baltimore Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3, wrote in the report.

    Following Batts' firing Wednesday, the union issued a statement reiterating the report's concerns but also said it would work with Davis to improve the situation.

    Davis was previously chief of police in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, and assistant chief in Prince George's County, Maryland. The mayor said that in addition to reducing crime, Davis would "bring accountability to police, hold officers who act out of line accountable for their actions."

    Rod J. Rosenstein, U.S. Attorney for Maryland, praised Davis, saying he helped reform the Prince George's County Police Department, "raising morale and professionalism while dramatically reducing crime."

    In his own remarks to the news conference, Davis said his goals would include improving the relationship with the officers who work for him. "I will walk with them and serve with them and be with them every step of the way," he said.

    But Davis also has indicated a willingness in the past to speak out against police abuses.

    As Anne Arundel chief, he issued a news release disagreeing with a decision by the county Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 70 to donate $1,070 to a defense fund for Officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri. Wilson, who is white, fatally shot Michael Brown, an unarmed black man, on Aug. 9.

    Rawlings-Blake appointed Batts as police commissioner in September 2012.

    His contract with the city paid him $190,000 and was to run through June 2020. It includes a provision for a severance payment equal to his annual salary if he is terminated without cause.

    Hours after he was fired, Batts sent a short statement to the Baltimore Sun.

    "I've been honored to serve the citizens and residents of Baltimore," he said. "I've been proud to be a police officer for this city."
     
  2. TwistedTiger

    TwistedTiger Founding Member

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    AL Sharpton supports this decision. After all it couldn't possibly be the mayor's fault that the city is going down the toilet.
     
    Last edited: Jul 8, 2015
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  3. CajunlostinCali

    CajunlostinCali Booger Eatin Moron

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  4. Bengal B

    Bengal B Founding Member

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    So who they gonna hire? Chuck Norris? Clint Eastwood? How about Commissioner Gordon? He knows Barman.
     
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  5. red55

    red55 curmudgeon Staff Member

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    The mayor is trying to save her own job. She is the one that made international news by ordering the police to give the protesters room to riot. They followed her orders and now they have a murder wave going on.
     
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  6. uscvball

    uscvball Founding Member

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    Baltimore isn't alone on the crime issue.

    "Crime is on the rise in Los Angeles again.

    After a 2014 that was the 12th straight year of declining and historically low crime, according to Mayor Eric Garcetti, 2015 is now looking at a second quarter of climbing rates.

    Garcetti and Los Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck today unveiled the city's mid-year crime stats, and they aren't pretty:

    Major crime, a category that includes everything from murder to car theft, is up 12.7 percent compared to the same time frame last year. Violent crime taken separately is up 20 percent. Property crime has increased by 10 percent.....New York, which claims, as does L.A., to be the nation's safest big city, has seen a spike in homicides. Chicago, Baltimore, St. Louis and other American big cities have seen crimes rise, all at about the same time.

    Jorja Leap, director of UCLA's Health and Social Justice Partnership, has an intriguing theory, however, that could explain why some crimes have increased in many big cities nationwide, particularly in L.A., New York and St. Louis.

    All are cities rocked by police killings of unarmed black men. In L.A. the cause célèbre is the case of Ezell Ford, who was fatally shot by police in South L.A. last summer.....Leap says officers are under intense pressure to watch what they do. And she notes that more and more people are filming what they do with smartphones:

    I think there has been ... a kind of a cooling effect because of the scrutiny of the LAPD. I think law enforcement is under the microscope with Ezell Ford and what's been happening nationally. They are weighing their behavior and interventions carefully. No one wants to be the next officer who made the wrong call. We would be idiots if we didn't consider the fact that all of this is having an impact on the actions and interventions of law enforcement. Who's got their smart phone out? Who's filming? Who's watching? She said cops just might be "skittish" about doing their jobs these days."
     
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  7. HalloweenRun

    HalloweenRun Founding Member

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    You cannot have the President and Attorney General being as critical as they have been of police, without emboldening the thug element.

    This type of bad behavior is totally predictable.
     
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  8. Bengal B

    Bengal B Founding Member

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    While it was stupid to order the cops to stand down and allow rioting I don't see how that has anything to do with some killings a few weeks later. There is nothing a police commissioner or chief of police or even the cop on the street can do to stop people from killing each other unless somebody tries to hire a hit man who almost always turns out to be an undercover cop. The best they can do is arrest the killers and try to solve the crime once its been committed.
     
  9. LSUTiga

    LSUTiga TF Pubic Relations

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    First too much enforcement now not enough. LMAO. I'd love to see them round up the rival gang members and 2 gangs at a time, turn 'em loose in a colosseum. People would pay money to see that carnage.
     
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  10. Bengal B

    Bengal B Founding Member

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    Thug-O-Mania
     

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