Really? I wouldn't have anticipated it being such a big story knowing only that the guy worked at Harvard.
7/23/2009 2:21:20 PM
i'd base it off of a harvard professor who's yelling about racism. there's going to be some stink. especially if the arrest is for such a minor thing as yelling at a police officer.
7/23/2009 2:24:00 PM
7/23/2009 2:31:17 PM
well he's already started to lie about in the press. even contradicting his own report. he said on the radio yesterday that he went outside of the house because he feared for his safety. and said that he didn't know who gates was at that point. when the report says that gates had already provided ID at that point and presumed before even talking to the guy that he wasn't a threat (thus was ok with going into his house without backup)
7/23/2009 2:35:10 PM
So far, we really only have Crowley's word and the police reports. Gates has yet to tell his side of the story, from anything i've seen. From the police reports, it seems pretty clear to me they are written in a way to paint the cops in the most positive light, so it's hard to say what really happened just based on that.Unfortunately, it would end up being Gate's word against Crowleys, and the cops usually win in that situation.Crowley's statements he made on the radio though don't make sense to me, especially as ^ noted, since they do seem to contradict the other reports.It's still not clear to me though what Gates could have possibly been arrested for in his own house if he wasn't physically threatening the police.[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 2:50 PM. Reason : ]
7/23/2009 2:48:57 PM
I'm a little late to the story because I managed to ignore this stupidity, but it keeps showing up on the front page of every news site. I caved in and read. After reading several different stories and this thread...Problem 1: A black man had a chip on his shoulder. Thinks he has some special rights because he's black and has a big you know what.Solution 1: Chill out dude. We know you have a big one. A little civility would have gone a loooooong way.Problem 2: A cop had a chip on his shoulder. Thinks that if you're a black person with a bad attitude and loud mouth, then you've committed a crime. They should arrest you before you manage to end up screaming at your cousin on the other end of Walmart.Solution 2: Chill out dude. That badge doesn't make you anyone's father.Problem 3: A TWW user has a chip on their shoulder. Thinks that he's actually important and arguing on the internet will actually prove something or convince someone otherwise.Solution 3: Chill out dude. It's just the intern3ts.[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 2:59 PM. Reason : meh]
7/23/2009 2:57:06 PM
Gates has already given several, differing testimonials.Crowley's account has been verified by witnesses, of which there were many at the scene.If I were to encounter a policeman responding to a break-in at my house, I think I'd be thankful. Why would any intelligent person be anything other than thankful? If I tripped the alarm at my house, and the cops came to investigate, the cops would be idiots for not treating me like a suspect, and I'd be an idiot if I didn't expect as much.Sure no one likes being treated as a suspect for a crime they didn't commit, but an intelligent person appreciates the need for such treatment, expecially if you're the victim of said crime. It's not like he was being arrested, or asked to come downtown. That happened after he flipped out.
7/23/2009 3:07:32 PM
7/23/2009 3:09:22 PM
^^ i think the issues are with what happened after they verified he wasn't a criminal. Why not just apologize and leave? I used to take naps in my car between classes, and a cop questioned me once... when he saw it was my car and I had a parking permit, he just said "okay be careful" and drove away.And where are you seeing Gates' account?I read through a handful of these: http://news.google.com/news/more?pz=1&ned=us&ncl=dTNVRaL2-Zk3GzMuhlTjGy2qIItIM&topic=hAnd almost all of them cite the police report of Crowley's radio interview for their accounts (which differ between news sites too).[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 3:12 PM. Reason : ]
7/23/2009 3:12:06 PM
http://tiny.cc/dnWqMLink to an article on how Crowley is a "profiling expert" and actually taught classes on how to avoid profiling.
7/23/2009 3:15:51 PM
7/23/2009 3:19:36 PM
a legal perspective from someone on andrew sullivan's site:
7/23/2009 3:21:37 PM
7/23/2009 3:26:32 PM
7/23/2009 3:30:31 PM
Some places have specific laws making it an arrestable offense to be offensive to a cop.But, I guess this is irrelevant if the police report has "disorderly conduct" as the charge.
7/23/2009 3:33:53 PM
Moron, Actually, Gates gave his story earlier this week in both a prepared statement issued by his lawyer and in an interview w/The Root (an interview some have noted seems to contradict his earlier statement).Here is my post about it from the previous page of the thread:Interesting excerpts from interview between Gates and The Root:http://www.theroot.com/views/skip-gates-speaksOn why his door was jammed:
7/23/2009 3:41:11 PM
7/23/2009 3:48:37 PM
^^ why would Crowley care if he was a harvard professor? I don't get why Crowley would ask about that (if that's what happened)... the drivers license with the address should be the only thing he cared about.
7/23/2009 3:52:58 PM
"Cop who arrested black scholar is profiling expert"The white police sergeant criticized by President Barack Obama for arresting black scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. in his Massachusetts home is a police academy expert on racial profiling. Cambridge Sgt. James Crowley has taught a class on racial profiling for five years at the Lowell Police Academy after being hand-picked for the job by former police Commissioner Ronny Watson, who is black, said Academy Director Thomas Fleming. "I have nothing but the highest respect for him as a police officer. He is very professional and he is a good role model for the young recruits in the police academy," Fleming told The Associated Press on Thursday. http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D99KBEAO1&show_article=1
7/23/2009 4:40:54 PM
Nobody wins in this situation. Congrats to everyone and their poison tipped quills/keyboards, especially first page posters
7/23/2009 4:55:53 PM
I haven't really commented yet on the main thrust of this thread, mostly b/c I've been pretty sick the past few days, other than to share the link about & text about it. I do wonder about the woman who called the police... I feel as though I could recognize my 20 or so nearest neighbors if they were trying to get in their own place. I also think that after the cops identified that he was who he said he was, and in his own home, then that should have been the end of it. But how much race played a factor, it is hard to say. I think the pool incident that I shared more of & went into more detail about is unquestionably an instance of racism & shows there is work to be done, especially when the racism is towards kids... that just isn't right.In regards to the arrest issue I'm not sure if this really helps the police officers defense though when he recently talked about performing CPR on someone 16 years ago.
7/23/2009 5:36:34 PM
she wasn't a neighbor. she was passing through the neighborhood (working i think).
7/23/2009 5:41:08 PM
sounds like gates got what he deserved. he played the race card and lost. it is obvious he was acting like a damned fool and not following orders. the cops did nothing wrong. asking him onto the porch is not wrong. maybe the officer didn't want someone to be in the house where a weapon might be obtained?
7/23/2009 5:50:00 PM
well he claimed it was because it was too loud in the house. but what does he know. he just wrote the police report and then said something entirely different the next day.
7/23/2009 5:55:15 PM
What is his new statement?
7/23/2009 6:09:18 PM
Sounds like another case of teh As many people declared in the lounge if a white male like myself is pulled the police is merely "doing his job" or i need to stop "being a bitch" or "I mean, if 98% of the time a group of 5 college aged males weren't drunk then the police officer wouldn't need to stereotype.You fucks create it you can change it, until then expect the world to hate you."message_topic.aspx?topic=571760If a police is investigating suspicious behavior and the target just happens to be black. Even if the officer is just doing his job you get the whole african community in an uproar screaming racism and unlawful persecution. Even if the officer may have a legitimate claims or if the black professor, with possibly a chip on his shoulder, acted in such "offended" manner as to antagonize the cop to make the arrest.I do not see how this guy would have gotten arrested had he come to the door and politely answered the cops questions.[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 6:24 PM. Reason : l]
7/23/2009 6:19:06 PM
^^^ no, you just misunderstood.He said to the press that he initially asked Gates to come outside because of safety issues. Of course Gates refused. He said in his police report that after gates refused to come outside, at some point he entered and asked for proof of residency, etc. Then Gates started yelling at him, and he asked to go outside again due to the acoustics in the house.Where is the discrepancy?[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 6:28 PM. Reason : 2]
7/23/2009 6:26:52 PM
7/23/2009 6:32:49 PM
obama needs to learn to keep his own racist comments to himselfif it ain't on the teleprompter mr president...stfu
7/23/2009 6:37:36 PM
7/23/2009 6:40:12 PM
^probably not what happenedthis is just another example of the
7/23/2009 6:45:43 PM
7/23/2009 6:48:29 PM
7/23/2009 7:08:08 PM
Dave Chapelle on what really happened: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dx2nRhwfydo
7/23/2009 7:58:27 PM
7/23/2009 8:34:26 PM
7/23/2009 9:43:53 PM
I do find it amusing that while profiling on race would be a bad thing, people would be perfectly OK with these cops profiling on age and disability.
7/23/2009 9:54:38 PM
The police report reads like a Monty Python skit.The officer walked up to a black man who was fighting with a front door and told him, to his face, that he was "investigating a report of a break in progress." Obviously at that point the officer didn't actually think Gates was trying to break in. Now I'm no student of police protocol, but is it often that people try to break in through the front door in upscale neighborhoods, in plain sight of everybody? And is it often that police respond to legitimate break in attempts by telling the person who they are and why they're there?And maybe I am from the privileged upbringing of small town North Carolina, but I can see how it's at least a little bit insulting to walk up to an older black man in a nice neighborhood and imply to his face that he's breaking into a house. At the very least, I would have considered the possibility.Of course from the report, it sounds like Gates totally over-reacted. In fact I suspect he's a professional over-reactor. But I didn't read anything that even remotely warranted arresting the man. What was the cop afraid of? If he just left, that the guy would sit there screaming for twenty or thirty more minutes? So what? If we just arrest people for screaming at themselves, I want that cop in SF -- we have plenty of crazy guys on the streets here for him to have a ball with.Obama should have stayed away from this one -- nobody walks away with their hands clean in a real-life social farce.[Edited on July 23, 2009 at 10:37 PM. Reason : foo]
7/23/2009 10:36:51 PM
No. This was O'bamas chance to practice what he preaches and bring the races together. He should have come out and said lets not rush to judgment and let the facts come out. Instead the angry black man came out of him and he verbally assaulted the cops without knowing all the facts. He really blew his first major "racial" incident.
7/23/2009 10:51:33 PM
^Excellent call
7/23/2009 11:18:59 PM
thats because Obama is a racist radical black man
7/23/2009 11:19:31 PM
7/23/2009 11:22:44 PM
^Who are you again?
7/24/2009 12:20:34 AM
a massachusetts lawyer on andrew sullivan's blog:
7/24/2009 2:27:50 AM
^
7/24/2009 8:46:23 AM
Jumping into the conversation late, but I think Obama's choice of words were correct. Note that he said "stupidly," not "wrongly." Of course the police officers acted stupidly; either:a) Gates was acting properly, and they weren't justified in arresting himb) Gates was acting improperly, and they let the situation escalate and gave Gates exactly what he wanted. There's no way this scenario could have happened if either party had been acting with a measure of humility.Neither scenario describes good police work, regardless of whether the officers were right or wrong.
7/24/2009 9:33:15 AM
^ lol are you on his pay roll? Are you suggesting we shouldn't arrest people that want to be arrested, even if they are breaking the law, because that would give them what they want? ahah I bet that's a good general rule for cops to use. "We can't arrest that guy breaking into that car, Phil. I happen to know he's actually a homosexual that wants to go to prison so he can he get it up the cornhole. No, no. We'll ignore him and he'll go away." But, of course, I'm sure you had a much more "nuanced" idea for how such a lame approach would be applied (i.e. only use it to arrest the people you want to arrest). lolAnyways, it sounds like your same argument could be used to describe why Obama's remarks were stupid in themselves, even if you think they are correct. "Of course Obama acted stupidly; either: a) he misunderstood the facts of the case and his statements were inaccurateb) the cops were acting improperly in arresting Gates, but in getting involved in a local matter involving a personal acquaintance, he only gave the right-wing noise machine more fodder to criticize his administration. neither scenario describes good politics, regardless of whether Obama was right or wrong" Partisanship is so last year, friend.
7/24/2009 10:30:59 AM
7/24/2009 11:07:41 AM
^ woefully unclear to a guy on TWW forum over a week after it happened?? YOU DON'T SAY!??? You don't thinking he was creating a disturbance...when *you were not there*!?!?! WOW!!!!! BREAKING NEWS!!!Look, I acknowledge the facts are fuzzy because none of us were there. That's why I abhor the certainty with which people (including our President) assume the cop was wrong "stupid".[Edited on July 24, 2009 at 11:42 AM. Reason : ``]
7/24/2009 11:40:38 AM
My thoughts:1.) The lady was right to call the police.2.) The police were correct to respond.3.) The police were correct to investigate, which required Gates to prove his identity.4.) Gates was justified at being upset by having to prove himself in his own home.5.) The officer was able to determine his identity.6.) The officer should have simply given his name and badge number and left.7.) Gates would have either cooled down or filed a complaint that would have went nowhere.8.) The officer showed poor judgment by arresting Gates. You can't come on to someones property, provoke them (regardless of intention), and then arrest them. You are going to lose that one every time.9.) The officer is going to get slapped with a civil rights lawsuit. Although he probably isn't guilty of that, and may win the suit, he still loses. Defendants in civil cases always lose, even when the win the case.10.) They both could have prevented this, but the officer is trained for these confrontations, Gates was not.
7/24/2009 11:43:24 AM