Excessive Overtime Abuse Will Continue Under APD’s New Overtime Policy

On June 10, the on line news and opinion outlet ABQ Reports published a story on the Albuquerque Police Department new overtime policy announced by Chief Michael Geier. The article was written and published by editor Dennis Domraski. Following is the article with the links to related columns:

HEADLINE: APD TRIES TO CURB MASSIVE OVERTIME USE/ABUSE
June 10, 2020
By Dennis Domrzalski

“Albuquerque Police Chief Mike Geier has moved to limit the excessive overtime hours that some APD officers have been claiming.

On May 29, Geier issued a special order capping the amount of regular time and over time that officers can work to 65 hours a week. For an officer that works a regular 40-hour shift, that means a maximum of 25 hours of overtime a week. There are some exceptions, but here’s the key paragraph from Geier’s order:

“The total number of hours an officer, sergeant or lieutenant can work in any one week is sixty-five (65) hours per week. This does not include court overtime. All chief’s overtime, grant overtime and any other work overtime will go toward the cap of sixty-five (65) hours per week. Any exception to this sixty-five hour per week maximum must be pre-approved by their Bureau Deputy Chief. If unscheduled overtime takes an employee over the weekly cap they must notify their chain of command by the end of the work shift in which the cap is reached. A Commander can approve an employee working additional hours to meet significant operational needs but not for Chief’s or grant overtime. The Chief of Police or his designee can waive the weekly cap to meet department operational needs.”

READ THE FULL ORDER HERE:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PRJEBUt23-ldK8L9OirCvYE8SxrY76Ml/view

That last sentence is a huge loophole as it can let Geier or any other police chief suspend the order for weeks or months at a time.

Cynical minds have suggested that Geier’s special order is an attempt to head off an investigation that State Auditor Brian Colón’s office is conducting into APD’s overtime problems. We reported on that investigation a few weeks ago. The story is posted below.

If Geier is serious about stemming APD’s overtime flood it will be bad news for the department’s overtime king, the human robot, officer Simon Drobik. In 2018 Drobik claimed extraordinary amounts of overtime, sometimes billing the city for more than 24 hours of work in a single day.

Last month we reported that Drobik, whose base pay is $31.50 an hour, was on his way to make $247,000 this year, For the first five months of this year, Drobik has made $89,775 according to city payroll records.

One thing that Geier’s order doesn’t address is outside work by APD officers and how much work outside of the department they can do. Drobik, for instance, has boasted that he has worked as a consultant on a Netflix movie. We have no idea how much time Drobik worked on the movie or if that work overlapped with his APD duties.”

Links to ABQ Report stories on Drobik overtime paid are here:

https://www.abqreport.com/single-post/2020/05/21/What-overtime-reform-APDs-human-robot-Simon-Drobik-makes-83371-in-first-four-months-of-this-year-On-track-to-make-247K-for-year

https://www.abqreport.com/single-post/2020/06/10/APD-tries-to-curb-massive-overtime-useabuse

DROBIK IS JUST A DOLLAR IN IN A SWIMMING POOL OF APD OVERTIME CASH PAID

On May 22, ABQ Reports published an article that APD Sergeant and Public Information Officer Simon Drobik was racking up massive and record setting amounts of overtime pay. For the first 4 months of this year, Drobik, whose base pay is $31.50 an hour ($63,630 yearly) has made $82,371, according to the city’s website. If he continues on the pace, Drobik will be paid $247,113 for the year. That will shatter the record of $192,973 that Drobik made in 2018, the year that Drobick’s excessive overtime was first reported on by ABQ Reports.

https://www.abqreport.com/single-post/2020/05/21/What-overtime-reform-APDs-human-robot-Simon-Drobik-makes-83371-in-first-four-months-of-this-year-On-track-to-make-247K-for-year

At the end of each calendar year, City Hall releases the top 250 wage earners. The list of 250 top city hall wages earners is what is paid for the full calendar year of January 1, to December 31 of any given year. The City of Albuquerque recently updated the list for the year 2019. A full listing of the names and salaries can be found here:

http://cognospublic.cabq.gov/ibmcognos/bi/?perspective=classicviewer&pathRef=.public_folders%2FTransparency%2FTop+Earners+of+the+City+of+Albuquerque+List&id=i5C8E3011CDD346029B51E17CB7132529&objRef=i5C8E3011CDD346029B51E17CB7132529&type=report&format=HTML&Download=false&prompt=true&cmProperties%5Bid%5D=i5C8E3011CDD346029B51E17CB7132529&cmProperties%5BdefaultName%5D=Top+Earners+of+the+City+of+Albuquerque+List&cmProperties%5Btype%5D=report&cmProperties%5Bpermissions%5D%5B%5D=execute&cmProperties%5Bpermissions%5D%5B%5D=traverse

In 2018, the breakdown of the 250 top paid city hall employees revealed that all were paid between $100,000 to $192,937.23. In 2018, there were 140 Police Officers and 55 Fire and Rescue Officers for a total of 195 out of 250.

In 2019, the breakdown of the 250 top paid city hall employees showed they were paid between $107,885 to $193,666.23. There was an even bigger disproportionate number of APD officers and Firefighters in 2019 over 2018. In 2019 there were 160 sworn APD police officers and 49 AFRD personnel for a total of 209 public safety employees. The remaining 41 includes 24 Department Directors and 17 other unclassified and classified positions. The lopsided numbers in APD can be attributed to overtime paid to the employees. The earning figures do not include take home vehicles, reimbursements, such as mileage and tuition, and vacation and sick leave accumulated amounts which are all taxable income once paid.

KELLER ADMINISTRATION TOP 20 PAID CITY HALL EMPLOYEES

Following are the names, titles and earned pay of the 20 top paid city hall employees for 2019:

1. Hernandez, Michael F, Police Sergeant 193,666.40
2. Johnson, Brian A, Senior Police Officer 1C, 188,884.04
3. Nair, Sarita Chief Administrative Officer 186,747.20
4. Geier, Michael Chief of Police 183,378.60
5. Rael, Lawrence Chief Operations Officer 181,953.60
6. Pholphiboun, Phetamphone B Police Sergeant 166,813.86
7. Drobik, Simon Master Police Officer 1C 166,484.67
8. Languit, Luke C Police Lieutenant 164,722.80
9. Ortiz, Christopher G Fire Para Battalion Chief – 40 HR 163,905.80
10 Rosenbaum, Nils Police Director of Behavioral Sciences 163,800.01
11. Lopez, Daniel J Police Sergeant 154,969.57
12. Yara, Stephanie M Director of Council Services 151,467.48
13. Pearson, Nicholas R Master Police Officer 1C149,157.79
14. Martinez, Dominic P Police Sergeant 149,152.48
15. Kim, Chad S Fire Battalion Chief – 56 HR 148,740.00
16. Dow, Paul Fire Chief – 40 HR 148,128.08
17. McCarson, Timothy W Senior Police Officer 1C 147,207.30
18. Do,Si N Fire Para Driver – 56 HR 145,018.19
19. Aguilar Jr,Esteban A City Attorney 144,386.41
20. Tapia,Jacob A Fire Para Lieutenant – 40 HR 144,292.81

APD CHIEF’S OFFICE

In the APD Chief’s Office, there were 10 major employees in the list of 250 top paid employees in 2019 earning pay ranging from $109,017 to $183,378. The highest 5 paid employees in the Chief’s Office for 2019 were:

1. Geier, Michael Chief of Police 183,378.60
2. Gonzalez, Arturo E Deputy Chief 140,498.63
3. Garcia, Eric J Deputy Chief 140,144.28
4. Medina, Harold Deputy Chief 136,040.20
5. Griego, Jon J Deputy Chief 134,522.59

APD COMMANDERS:

There were 16 APD Commanders in the list of 250 top paid employees in 2019 earning pay ranging from $108,181 to $129,230. The 5 highest paid APD Commanders for 2019 were:

1. Rivera, Donovan J Commander 129,230.57
2. Espinosa, Timothy R Commander 125,755.19
3. Garcia, Mizel Commander 124,594.94
4. Lowe, Cori M Commander 124,053.18
5. George, Christopher N Commander 123,592.45

APD LIEUTENANTS:

There were 32 APD Lieutenants in the list of 250 top paid employees in 2019 earning pay ranging from $108,031 to $164,722. Hourly pay rate for APD Lieutenants is $40.00 an hour or $83,200 yearly. The 5 highest paid APD Lieutenants for 2019 were:

1. Languit, Luke C Lieutenant 164,722.80
2. Patterson, Christopher Lieutenant 138,606.30
3. Jones, Aaron M. PD-Police Lieutenant 136,824.53
4. Bell Garcia, Jennifer L Lieutenant 134,492.33
5. Bassett, Jeremy D Lieutenant 132,599.17

APD Sergeants:

There were 32 APD Sergeants in the list of 250 top paid employees in 2019 earning pay ranging from $109,292 to $193,666. Hourly pay rate for APD Sergeants is $35 an hour, or $72,800 a year. The 5 highest paid Sergeants in 2019 were:

1. Hernandez, Michael F Police Sergeant 193,666.40
2. Pholphiboun, Phetamphone B Police Sergeant 166,813.86
3. Lopez, Daniel J Sergeant 154,969.57
4. Martinez, Dominic P Sergeant 149,152.48
5. Hunt, Justin R Sergeant 140,961.94

APD Patrol Officers:

There were 70 APD patrol officers in the list of 250 top paid employees in 2019 earning pay ranging from $108,167 to $188,844. Hourly pay rate for Patrol Officers is $29.00 an hour to $31.50 an hour depending upon years of experience. The top 20 highest paid Patrol Officers in 2019 were:

1. Johnson, Brian, Senior Police Officer 1C 188,884.04
2. Drobik, Simon Master Police Officer 1C 166,484.67
3. Pearson, Nicholas R Master Police Officer 1C 149,157.79
4. McCarson, Timothy W Senior Police Officer 1C 147,207.30
5. Hollier, Jeremy B Senior Police Officer 1C 143,229.86
6. Martinez, Yvonne Master Police Officer 1C 140,522.20
7. Lehocky, Andrew J Master Police Officer 1C 140,107.90
8. Garza, Ramiro J Senior Police Officer 1C 136,815.26
9. Solis, Brenda M Senior Police Officer 1C 136,522.25
10. Canales, Ladio Senior Police Officer 1C 135,591.41
11. Rico, Michael K Senior Police Officer 1C 133,020.75
12. Hernandez, Francisco F Senior Police Officer 1C 132,288.88
13. Hernandez Jr, Jimmy S Senior Police Officer 1C 132,093.96
14. Burchell, Edward Master Police Officer 1C 131,582.84
15. Carter, Jessie W. Senior Police Officer 1C 131,530.98
16. Swessel, Robert A Master Police Officer 1C 131,402.46
17. Shook, Michael B. Senior Police Officer 1C 130,875.25
18. O’Neil, Craig P Master Police Officer 1C 129,424.58
19. Champine, Daniel J Master Police Officer 1C 128,915.79
20. Montano, Joshua Senior Police Officer 1C 124,635.53

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

Police officers earning excessive overtime is nothing new. It has been going on for years and is very common knowledge. During the last 9 years, the Albuquerque Police Department has consistently gone over its overtime budget by millions. In fiscal year 2016, APD was funded for $9 million for over time but APD actually spent $13 million. A March, 2017 city internal audit of APD’s overtime spending found police officers taking advantage of a system that allows them to accumulate excessive overtime at the expense of other city departments. A city internal audit report released in March, 2017 revealed that the Albuquerque Police Department spent over $3.9 million over its $9 million “overtime” budget.

On April 13, 2020, the Albuquerque City Council enacted R-20-31 which is the city’s operating budget for fiscal year 2020-2021 that goes into effect on July 1, 2020 and ends June 31, 2021 for all city hall departments. The 2020-2021 APD operating budget is $207,877,000 and it has a mere $2,225,000 allocated for overtime.

THE DANGERS OF POLICE OVERTIME TO PUBLIC SAFETY

APD has an alarming increase in “classified” positions that are being paid 6 figure pay based on hourly wages. The increase pay requires you to assume that all are doing a good, great or an exceptional job which is very difficult to justify when it turns out that is not the case or abuse is found. The 6 figure salaries being paid to sworn Patrol Officers can be attributed to “overtime” worked which is very problematic.

From a personnel management standpoint, when you have a select few that are taking home the lion’s share of overtime, it causes moral problems with the rest. Consecutive shifts or excessive overtime for any police officer can lead to extreme fatigue, emotional burnout and reduce an officer’s alertness and response times and reflexes that can endanger lives and public safety.

Excessive overtime paid is a red flag for abuse of the system, mismanagement of police resources or the lack of personnel. APD has added approximately 100 police officers last year as a result of increases in pay and an aggressive recruitment program. APD is projected to have upwards of 980 sworn police by July 1, 2020. The ultimate goal of the Keller Administration is to have 1,200 full time sworn police.

Overtime paid by APD should have come down as more police officers were added to the ranks, but that did not happen. When APD exceeds its overtime budget, it is to the detriment of other city departments and other city employees in that the additional funding must be found somewhere else, either by taking it from other departments and programs, budget cuts or cost saving measurements.

For the last 3 years, APD has exceeded its overtime budget by as much as $4 million or more. In 2019, APD spent $11.5 million paying sworn police overtime when the budget was $9 million. The 2020-2021 budget which begins on July 1, 2020 provides a mere $2,225,000 to pay for police overtime.

RESTRUCTURE APD 40 HOUR WEEKLY PAY SYSTEM TO SALARY PAY SYSTEM

Chief Michael Geier’s change in the overtime policy is a good first step, but it does not go far enough and will likely be abused, no doubt with the blessing of the APD chain of command. The new policy has a glaring loophole as pointed out by ABQ Reports when the policy states “The Chief of Police or his designee can waive the weekly cap to meet department operational needs.” No doubt Dolbick, based on his past overtime, will take advantage of the loophole, so the Chief should not even bother or waste his time.

Authorizing a 65-hour work week with the normal 40 hours work week and adding 25 hours of overtime does not make much sense if you want to avoid extreme fatigue and emotional burnout. It is likely given the amount of pay involved, more officers will want to work 65-hour work weeks, 40 at regular pay and 25 at time and a half.

The 25-hour cap on overtime should be monthly, not weekly and an “on call” shift pool of officers should be created. As another alternative to paying overtime and longevity bonuses the City should do away with APD hourly wage and time and a half for overtime for sworn police and implement a salary structure based strictly on steps and years of service. A complete restructuring of the existing APD 40-hour work week and hourly wage system needs to be implemented.

A base pay salary system should be implemented for all APD sworn personnel. A base salary system with step increases for length of service should be implemented. The longevity bonus pay would be eliminated and built into the salary structure. Mandatory shift time to work would remain the same, but if more time is needed to complete a work load or assignments for the day, the salaried employee works it for the same salary with no overtime paid and a modification of shift times for court appearances.

APD Patrol Officers First Class who handle DWI during nighttime shifts should be required to change their shift times to daytime shifts when the arraignments and trials occur to prevent overtime pay. As an alternative to DWI arraignment, the City Attorney’s Office should explore the possibility of expanding or modifying the Metro Traffic Arraignment Program with the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office assisting to include not just traffic citations but DWI arraignments to eliminate the need for APD officers to appear at such arraignments.

FINAL COMMENTARY

Until real overtime pay and salary pay reform is implemented at APD, do not expect too much to change and expect the overtime abuse to continue at APD, especially by APD spokespersons such as Simon Dolbick and the other 150 sworn police in the list of the top 250 paid city hall employees.

“Defund The Police”: A Tale of Two Cities, A Tale Of Two Mayors, The Crossroads They Both Face And What It Means To Their Political Futures

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way – in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only.”

A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens

This blog article is a tale of two cities. A tale of two young, highly educated, up and coming, charismatic, progressive, Democrat Mayors. Two Mayors essentially coming from white privilege backgrounds.

Both cities are the largest cities in their states with large minority populations, one African American and the other Hispanic. Both cities have police departments roughly the same size and each city spends about $200 million a year to fund their police departments. Both cities are dealing with excessive use of force and deadly force killings by the police, one city with an extensive history of it and the other with a recent killing. Both cities are dealing with protests, sometimes peaceful, sometime violent, sparked by the killing of African American George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer.

The first Mayor had the murder of George Floyd occur in his city. The second Mayor is dealing with a police department struggling to implement sweeping federal court mandated reforms relating to “excessive use of force” and “deadly force” after the US Justice Department investigation found a “culture of aggression”. Both Mayors consider themselves civil rights advocates, condemn racism, want inclusion and racial equality. It is highly unlikely they themselves have ever experienced racism to the extent their cities minority populations have. Both Mayors are having difficulty walking a tight rope and juggling police relations under their command and public outrage and protests over the murder of African American George Floyd. Both are being confronted with cries to “defund the police” and demands to do much more to deal with racism in their cities.

MINNEAPOLIS AND MAYOR JACOB FREY

The population of Minneapolis, Minnesota in 2020 has a population of 437,069, and it is the largest city in Minnesota and the 45th largest city in the United States.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/us-cities/minneapolis-population/

The Minneapolis Police Department budget for 2020 was $193.3 million with funding for 892 sworn officers and 175 civilian employees for a total of 1,067 employees.

http://www.minneapolismn.gov/www/groups/public/@finance/documents/webcontent/wcmsp-214163.pdf

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, 38, announced his candidacy for Mayor of Minneapolis on January 3, 2017, and won the November 7 municipal election. Frey was a Minneapolis City Councilor from 2013 until his election as mayor in 2017. He is a 2004 graduate of William & Mary and a 2007 graduate of Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law. Frey was a civil rights attorney when he ran for Mayor. Much like Mayor Tim Keller, Frey was swept into office on promises to fix the broken relationship between the community and police reforms.

Soon after being elected, Mayor Frey successfully pushed reforms to the Minneapolis Police Department’s body camera policy. The changes tied non-compliance to stricter disciplinary consequences for the first time. Following the changes, officer compliance with the body camera policy reached record highs.

In 2019, Frey announced the banning of “warrior trainingz” for police officers, which had been taken by the officer who killed African American Philando Castile. It was on July 6, 2016, that Philando Castile, a 32-year-old African American man, was fatally shot during a traffic stop by Police Officer Jeronimo Yanez, a 28-year-old Hispanic-American police officer.

Castile informed the officer that he was carrying a hand gun in his car. The police car dash camera shows the moment when Castile is shot and killed. It shows Castile complying with police officer orders to show proof of insurance and also telling the police officer that he had a gun in his car and he had a license to legally carry it. The police officer ostensibly took the disclosure as a threat, drew his gun and shot Castile point blank killing him. On July 6, 2016, the police officer was acquitted of ‎Second-degree manslaughter by a jury. A link to the police dash cam is here:

https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000005176538/dash-camera-shows-moment-philando-castile-is-killed.html

THE MURDER THAT SPARKED A GLOBAL MOVEMENT

On Monday, May 26, around 8 p.m., African American George Floyd, 46, was arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota for passing a counterfeit $20 bill. The video of George Floyd being arrested is extremely difficult to watch. The video clearly shows he did not actively resist arrest. Floyd did not have a weapon on him when the arrest was made and he was handcuffed. Police Officer Derek Chauvin took Floyd to the ground and he was subdued with his stomach and face on the ground.

Officer Chauvin placed his knee on Floyd’s neck and he used his full body weight to suppress George Floyd’s head and body to the ground. The take down suppression lasted for almost a full 9 minutes, during which time George Floyd begged for his life saying at least 14 times “I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe.” Paramedics were called and when they arrived, Floyd was none responsive and was dead. Police Officer Chauvin has been charged with murder and with manslaughter and arrested.

You can view the video here:

https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2020/05/29/george-floyd-arrest-video-minneapolis-dp-orig.cnn

The murder of Floyd at the hands of police officer has been the catalyst for change, not only in the United States but in many European countries. “I can’t breathe” has become a battle cry to end racism and police killings of unarmed people of color. Protest in the United States, Canada and Europe have broken out as anger and rage become the fuel for change in police practices.

Last month, Mayor Frey ordered a police station to evacuate as rioters burned it to the ground. Frey is also seeking federal and state aid for his city, citing more than $55 million in damages from the riots.

On May 27, 2020, following and during protests sparked from the killing of George Floyd by police officer Derek Chauvin, Frey demanded the firing of polic officer Chauvin Floyd and said:

“Being black in America should not be a death sentence. For five minutes we watched as a white police officer pressed his knee into the neck of a black man. For five minutes. When you hear someone calling for help, you are supposed to help.”

Mayor Frey later called for criminal charges to be filed against Derek Chauvin, the arresting officer who pressed his knee on Floyd’s neck for upwards of 9 minutes while Floyd cried out 14 times “I can’t breathe”. Chauvin was later charged with third-degree murder, which was later upgraded to second-degree murder, he was arrested and bond has been set at $1 million dollars.

MAYOR FREY’S APPEARANCE AT PROTEST GOES SERIOUSLY WRONG

On June 6, 2020, a march was held in Minneapolis, pushing for the abolishment of the Minneapolis Police Department attended by hundreds. Mayor Frey attended the protest. Looming above the mayor on a stage set up in the middle of the street, an African American woman with a microphone asked Frey point blank if he would commit on the spot to defunding the Minneapolis Police Department. She shouted to the Mayor, “It is a yes or no.” She then bellowed to the protesters to be quiet but reminded the protesters that Frey is up for re-election next year. She said “And if he says no, guess what we’re going to do next year,” adding an expletive for emphasis.

The microphone was handed to Mayor Frey, who said in a barely audible voice because it was muffled by a face mask:

“I do not support the full abolition of the police.”

After Frey answered the question, protesters booed him loudly and began chanting “Go home, Jacob, go home!” and “Shame! Shame!” Frey then turned and left slowly and walked through hundreds of protesters. A video of the interaction hit social media and the next day the story was on the national news, including the New York Times.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/07/us/minneapolis-mayor-jacob-frey-walk-of-shame.html

In a subsequent interview with a local TV station, Frey addressed the issue of “defunding” the police department this way:

“I’ll work relentlessly with Chief Arradondo and alongside community toward deep, structural reform and addressing systemic racism in police culture. We’re ready to dig in and enact more community-led, public safety strategies on behalf of our city. But, I do not support abolishing the Minneapolis Police Department.”

Frey prefaced his comments by saying he was “coming to grips” with his “own brokenness,” and promised to put the police union “in its place.” Protesters clearly were not convinced, yelling “It’s not about you!” and “Go home Jacob, go home!”

MAYOR FREY FACES SERIOUS ATTEMPT TO DEFUND MINNEAPOLIS POLICE DEPARTMENT

On Thursday, June 4, Minneapolis City Council member Jeremiah Ellison said on TWITTER:

[Minneapolis will] “dramatically rethink how we approach public safety and emergency response. We are going to dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department and when we’re done, we’re not simply gonna glue it back together.”

On Sunday, June 7, a majority of the members of the Minneapolis City Council said they support disbanding the city’s police department. Nine of the council’s 12 members appeared with activists at an afternoon rally in a city park and vowed to end policing as the city currently knows it. Lisa Bender, the president of Minneapolis City Council said:

“It is clear that our system of policing is not keeping our communities safe. … Our efforts at incremental reform have failed, period.”

ALBUQUERQUE AND MAYOR TIM KELLER

In 2020, Albuquerque has a population of 561,188, it is the largest city in New Mexico and the 32nd largest city in the United States. The Albuquerque Police Department’s budget for the 2020 fiscal year was $205 million with funding for 1,513 full time positions that included funding for 1,040 sworn police officers and 473 civilian employees. APD is spending $88 million over 4 years to add 100 new police officers each year of the 4 years with and additional $33 million in non recurring expenses. The massive investment is being done in order to full fill Mayor Tim Keller’s 2017 campaign promise to increase the size of APD, return to community-based policing and to reduce the city’s high crime rates.

http://documents.cabq.gov/budget/fy-20-approved-budget.pdf

Mayor Tim Keller, 41, was elected on November 7, 2017, the same day as Mayor Jacob Frey, and was sworn in on January 1, 2018. Keller attended St. Pius High School, has a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Norte Dame and a Master of Business Administration from Harvard. Prior to being elected Mayor, he was elected New Mexico State Auditor in 2016 to a 4-year term, ran for Mayor while serving as State Auditor, and resigning less than 2 years serving as State Auditor once he was elected Mayor. Prior to being State Auditor, Keller was a New Mexico State Senator for 6 years, and ran for State Auditor in the middle of his second 4-year term as a NM State Senator and once again resigned in the middle of an elected 4 year term as a State Senator when he was elected State Auditor.

When then State Auditor and candidate for Mayor, Tim Keller campaigned on the platform of fully implementing the Department of Justice (DOJ) mandated reforms, increasing the size of the police department, returning to community-based policing, reducing skyrocketing high crime rates, economic development and raising taxes only with a public vote. The Keller Administration is implementing an $88 million-dollar APD police expansion program increasing the number of sworn police officers from 898 positions filled to 1,200, or by 302 sworn police officers, over a four-year period.

“HE’S EVERYWHERE, HE’S EVERYWHERE” AND ALWAYS ON THE MOVE

Since being sworn into office, Mayor Tim Keller, 41, has taken photo ops to an all new level by attending functions to speak at, attending marches, attending heavy metal concerts to introduce the band, running in track meets and participating in exhibition football games as the quarterback, enjoying reliving his high school glory days, and posting pictures and videos of his press conferences on FACEBOOK.

Mayor Keller began increasing his press conferences even more so when Governor Lujan Grisham issued pandemic quarantine and emergency health orders to deal with the pandemic. Keller also issued his own emergency health orders to deal with the city’s response to the pandemic. Appearing as though he is competing with the Governor, Mayor Keller began daily news briefings and conducting virtual town hall meetings by phone calling upwards of 14,000 residents to answer questions and to talk about the city’s response to the pandemic.

When African American George Floyed was killed by a Minneapolis Police officer and protest broke out across the country, including Albuquerque, Mayor Keller kick his public relations into even higher gear. Mayor Keller is conducting press conferences on how the city is dealing with the protests from a law enforcement perspective.

Keller has been seen and interviewed by the news media at Black Lives Matter protests and has spoken at protests events, but has not been met with the absolute hostility Mayor Frey has endured, that is until recently. At a vigil for George Floyd, after Keller was introduced he took to the podium and began by quoting George Floyd by saying “I can’t breath”. As Keller continued to speak, he was heckled with the chants and the slogan “defund the police”. The chant was coming from a number of young protesters in the back that had attended a rally the night before.

Not to be deterred, Keller ignored the heckling, proclaimed his “Office of Equity and Inclusion” and police reforms are working, but he cut his comments short. Based on the surprise look on his face when he was interrupted, Keller ostensibly did not understand the chant or was at least puzzled why he was being interrupted, something he is not use to. It was reported Keller left after being questioned about defunding Albuquerque police. On FACEBOOK, where Keller posted his speech, Keller was excoriated with many comments with some critics asking why he was invited in the first place seeing that APD used tear gas to disperse a crowd the night before.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1463867/its-their-time.html

KELLER TOUTS SUCCESS OF DOJ REFORMS, BUT FAILS TO DISCLOSE RESISTANCE TO REFORMS AND WHAT HE INTENDS TO DO ABOUT IT

On June 4, Mayor Tim Keller, Chief Administrative Officer Sarita Nair, Albuquerque Police Department (APD) command staff, the City’s Attorney office and Ed Harness, the Director of the Civilian Police Oversight Agency in a one hour press conference, touted progress made by APD in implementing the reforms mandated by the federal Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA) with the Department of Justice (DOJ). The reforms deal with excessive use of force and deadly force by APD that resulted in 32 deaths and $62 million in civil settlements.

The press conference was held in part in response to the protests over the murder of George Floyd. Albuquerque has not been spared the protests. The protests by and large have been peaceful but on two occasions property damage and violence has erupted. The city is seeing its Police Department exhibit a remarkable amount of restraint and professionalism that so far has resulted in no one getting killed. How APD is handling protests is evidence that all of the training and all the reforms that were mandated by the Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA) are working. The Albuquerque Police Department and the officers of APD are commended and credited for the manner and approach they are taking in handling the protests.

During the June 4 press conference, Keller showcased how APD is measuring up to a national effort known as the “#8 Can’t Waite” program targeting 8 specific policy changes, or metrics, that reform advocates say can help reduce police violence by 77%. According to Keller and Nair, APD has achieved 6 of the “#8 Can’t Wait” policy changes because of implementation of the DOJ reforms.

What Mayor Keller did not publicly disclose during his June 4 press conference is that the “counter CASA effect” is impeding DOJ reforms. It is also by extension impeding the “#8 Can’t Wait” metrics. The “Counter CASA effect” was explained by the Federal Monitor on September 10, 2018 during a federal court hearing. Federal Monitor Dr. James Ginger told the federal judge that a group of “high-ranking APD officers” within the department were trying to thwart reform efforts. The Federal Monitor revealed that the group of “high-ranking APD officers” were APD sergeants and lieutenants. Because sergeants and lieutenants are part of the police bargaining unit they remained in their positions and could not be removed by the Chief.

In his 10th Auditors Report, Dr. Ginger stated:

“Sergeants and lieutenants, at times, go to extreme lengths to excuse officer behaviors that clearly violate established and trained APD policy, using excuses, deflective verbiage, de minimis comments and unsupported assertions to avoid calling out subordinates’ failures to adhere to established policies and expected practice. Supervisors, sergeants, and mid-level managers, lieutenants, routinely ignore serious violations, fail to note minor infractions, and instead, consider a given case “complete”. … Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) disciplinary timelines, appear at times to be manipulated by supervisory, management and command levels at the area commands, letting known violations lie dormant until timelines for discipline cannot be met.”

In his 11th Audit Report, the Federal Monitor made it clear once again that there are many within APD that are still overtly resistant to reforms and said:

“Since the beginning of the CASA compliance process that there were a few at APD who were overtly resistant to the CASA. [The Monitor] in the past [has] found evidence of a “counter-CASA effect” among some at the supervisory, mid-management, and command levels at APD. Those who knowingly or subconsciously count themselves in this group are beginning to face pressure to change their assessment of the value of the CASA. In some cases [they] have faced reasonably prompt and appropriate corrective efforts from the current executive levels of the APD for behavior that is not congruent with the CASA.” According to the report, “this as an essential “way forward” if APD is to move into full compliance. The remaining issue is that this pressure is neither uniform nor persistent.”

See page 303 of 307 of Monitor’s 10th report.

In his 11th report, the monitor stated that APD personnel:

“were still failing to adhere to the requirements of the CASA found in past monitoring reports, including some instances moving beyond the epicenter of supervision to mid- and upper management levels of the organization. … Some in APD’s command levels continue to exhibit behaviors that “build bulwarks” [or walls] preventing fair and objective discipline, including a process of attempting to delay and in some cases successfully delaying the oversight processes until the timelines for administering discipline had been exceeded. [The] delays prevented an effective remedial response to behavior that is clearly in violation of established policy.”

See page 4 of 307of Monitors 11th report.

The entire 11th Federal Monitors report can be found at this link:

https://www.justice.gov/usao-nm/file/1274006/download

MEANING OF “DEFUND THE POLICE”

Disbanding entire police departments has happened before in the United States cities. In 2012, with crime rampant in Camden, New Jersey, the city disbanded its entire police department and replaced it with a new force that covered Camden County. Compton, California, took the same step in 2000, shifting its policing to Los Angeles County. Like it or not, the same thing could easily happen here in Albuquerque.

The “defund the police” movement can be defined in simple terms as meaning taking funding away from police forces and invest or reallocate those funds into social programs to address the real causes of crime. Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement put it this way:

“It’s not just about taking away money from the police, it’s about reinvesting those dollars into [minority] communities. Communities that have been deeply divested from, communities that, some have never felt the impact of having true resources. And so we have to reconsider what we’re resourcing. I’ve been saying we have an economy of punishment over an economy of care.”

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/06/08/what-does-defund-police-mean-george-floyd-black-lives-matter/5317240002/

Advocates of “Defund the Police” insist that it is not about eliminating police departments or stripping police agencies of all of their money. What they do say is that it is time for the country to address systemic problems in policing in America and spend more on what communities across the United States need such as housing, education and economic development and job growth.

In Minneapolis the group MPD150 says it is “working towards a police-free Minneapolis,” and the group wrote on its website:

Defund the Police is more about strategically reallocating resources, funding, and responsibility away from police and toward community-based models of safety, support, and prevention. The people who respond to crises in our community should be the people who are best-equipped to deal with those crises, [not the police]”

United States Representative Karen Bass, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said part of the “defund the police” movement is really about how money is spent and had this to say in an interview with CNN:

“Now, I don’t believe that you should disband police departments. … But I do think that, in cities, in states, we need to look at how we are spending the resources and invest more in our communities. … Maybe this is an opportunity to re-envision public safety,”

Black Lives Matter co-founder Alicia Garza asked during an interview on NBC’s Meet the Press said:

“Why can’t we look at how it is that we reorganize our priorities, so people don’t have to be in the streets during a national pandemic?”.

Activists acknowledge that to “defund the police” will be a long and drawn out process, predominantly because law enforcement in general are supported by their communities. In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio said that the city would move funding from the NYPD to youth initiatives and social services, while keeping the city safe, but he didn’t give details. In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti vowed to cut as much as $150 million that was part of a planned increase in the police department’s budget.

Links to news sources and related news coverage are here:

https://hosted.ap.org/dailytimes/article/157539e98d2b6a546ca5ecdf4f88f098/when-protesters-cry-defund-police-what-does-it-mean

https://www.startribune.com/movement-to-defund-police-sees-minneapolis-as-proving-ground/571116932/

https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/06/us/what-is-defund-police-trnd/index.html#:~:text=Defunding%20law%20enforcement%20%22means%20that,have%20been%20deeply%20divested%20from.%22

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

Albuquerque is the largest city in New Mexico and the 32nd largest city in the United States. Minneapolis, Minnesota is the largest city in Minnesota and the 45th largest city in the United States. Both city’s police departments are roughly the same size and both police departments have nefarious pasts when it comes to police brutality, excessive use of force and deadly force. The problems with the Minneapolis, Minnesota police department deal with systemic racism. Systemic racism within APD was not the problem found by the Department of Justice investigation. The city’s DOJ consent decree reforms deal predominantly with APD’s interactions with the mentally ill and a culture of aggression found within APD dealing with all citizens encountered.

Both Mayor Jacob Frey and Mayor Tim Keller are up for election to a second term in 2021. Over a year and a half remains in their terms, not to mention reelection bids that likely will be brutal. It is likely both will be favored for reelection. However, in these difficult times of both the corona virus and a civil rights movement that has been ignited and gone global over the killing of George Floyd, a year and a half is a lifetime in politics where anything can and will likely happened for the worst before it gets better.

Pandering to the public and making appearances at protests to speak, as has been done by both Mayor Frey and Mayor Keller, is not governing and not making the hard decisions. Nor is it the time for both politicians to try and say what they have done in the past, how good they are doing and what they are doing now to solve systemic racism. What is happening in both cities is the protesters movement and moment in time, not any politicians time. Both Mayors need to just listen to the concerns of the minorities that they are not a part of but nonetheless represent as Mayor of their respective cities. Attend the protest and just listen for a change.

MAYOR JACOB FREY’S CROSSROAD

Mayor Jacob Frey is now at a crossroad. He needs to decide if he should stand by his decision not to defund the Minneapolis Police Department and take the road to veto any legislation. With a veto, Frey risks an embarrassing override and the accusation he could not control or manage his police department and such a drastic move as “defunding the police” is necessary. The other road he could take is to go along with the City Council and do whatever it wants as to defunding the police. As a former civil rights attorney, you would think Frey would not think twice about defunding the police department. But leading and making decisions on public safety is a lot harder than the practice of law. Frey is to be commended for not having a knee jerk reaction just to score political points at a protest.

MAYOR TIM KELLER’S CROSSROAD

Thus far, Mayor Keller has resisted imposing a curfew as well resisting asking Governor Lujan Grisham to call out the National Guard. Where the city goes from here and what APD management is doing with the police reforms needs to be address by the Keller Administration.

Mayor Keller is faced with APD sergeants and lieutenants that are part of management but they are not “at will” employees and they are allowed to join the police union. The APD sergeants and lieutenants being in the police bargaining unit creates a clear conflict within management and the union they are a part of and sends mixed messages to rank and file sworn police officers.

In Albuquerque, APD police sergeants and lieutenants need to be made “ at will” employees and removed from the police union in order for Keller to get a real buy in to management’s goals of police reform and the CASA reforms. For 6 years under the consent decree, APD Police sergeants and lieutenants have been serving two masters of Administration Management and Union priorities that are in conflict when it comes to the CASA reforms and the #8 Can’t Waite metrics. Until sergeants and lieutenants are removed from the union and made at will employees, Mayor Keller and the public should not expect the CASA reforms or the #8 Can’t Waite” metrics to be accomplished any time soon.

Mayor Tim Keller is also at a crossroad. His failure to be more aggressive with removing any and all sworn police who impede the reform process has now caught up because of the passage of time and he does not have much time left. It is not at likely that defunding the APD is being seriously considered by Keller seeing as he continually goes to APD’s defense when mismanagement is revealed and then says progress is being made with the reforms. Mayor Keller no doubt will want the police unions endorsement again next year as he seeks a second term.

The very lucrative two-year Police Union Contract that provides for substantial raises and longevity pay increases to rank and file police will soon expire. Mayor Keller should order his administration to seek removal of sergeants and lieutenants from the bargaining unit and refuse to sign another contract with the police union until that is done, or just slam the door on any such discussion and continue to give the Police Union any and all it wants as far as concessions. Mayor Keller should begin the discussions by making it clear he will not seek, nor does he want, the APOA Union endorsement at least until the Court Approved Settlement Agreement reforms are 100% implemented and the case is dismissed, along with all causes of action, with prejudice.

FINAL COMMENTS

In both Minneapolis and Albuquerque, the law enforcement community, must understand with complete clarity that police brutality, excessive use of force and deadly force based on racial profiling and the presumption of guilt because of a person’s color and not evidence will not be tolerated. Police must recognize that the motto “serve and protect” is not based on skin color.

Come election day November 2, 2021, it will be interesting to see if both Mayor Frey and Mayor Keller are still Mayor of their cities, if only one is still mayor or if both will be looking for a new job. What will be even more interesting is what will happen with the Minneapolis and Albuquerque Police Departments and how both departments will look in a year and a half presuming the departments will still be in existence.

“Counter Casa Effect” Impedes Both DOJ Reforms And “#8 Can’t Wait” Metrics

On June 4, Mayor Tim Keller, Chief Administrative Officer Sarita Nair, Albuquerque Police Department (APD) command staff, the City’s Attorney office and Ed Harness, the Director of the Civilian Police Oversight Agency in a one hour press conference, touted progress made by APD in implementing the reforms mandated by the federal Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA) with the Department of Justice (DOJ). The reforms deal with excessive use of force and deadly force by APD.

The press conference was held in part in response to the protests over the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer using excessive force resulting death. Protests that are also occurring in Albuquerque. Keller showcased how APD is measuring up to a national effort known as the “#8 Can’t Waite” program targeting 8 specific policy changes, or metrics, that reform advocates say can help reduce police violence by 77%. According to Keller and Nair, APD has already achieved 6 of the “#Eight Can’t Wait” policy changes. What they did not disclose was that the same “counter CASA effect” that is impeding DOJ reforms is also impeding all “#Eight Can’t Wait” metrics.

The link to the one-hour press conference is here:

https://www.facebook.com/MayorKeller/videos/748290332645391

This blog article is a deep dive analysis of the “#8 Can’t Wait” metrics, their application to APD, and how the metrics are embodied or reflected in the DOJ mandated reforms. The article also identifies “the counter casa effect” as the biggest impediment to fully implementing the DOJ reforms and the “#8 Can’t Wait” Metrics .

KELLER AND APD TOUT PROGRESS IN TACKLING EXCESSIVE FORCE AND DEADLY FORCE POLICE POLICY

During the press conference, Mayor Keller said the city is meeting 6 of the 8 metrics that “#8 Can’t Wait” is being advocated to be adopted by all police departments in the country. It was on November 27 , 2014, that the city entered into a federal Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA) mandating 278 reforms. For almost 6 years, APD has been implementing the CASA reforms.

Of the eight policy changes “8 Can’t Wait” is highlighting, APD received a passing grade for the following 6 areas:

1. Having policies banning choke holds and strangleholds;
2. Requiring de-escalation tactics by police;
3. Requiring that officers warn individuals before shooting;
4. Implementing a “duty to intervene” by police on police;
5. Requiring the use of force continuum limiting types of force and/or weapons that can be used to respond to specific types of resistance;
6. Implementing a policy requiring comprehensive reporting of use of force by police officers.

According to the “8 Can’t Wait” effort, APD has not met the metrics in two areas:

1. Banning all shootings at moving vehicles;
2. Require police to exhaust of “all alternatives before shooting.”

APD command staff said that the department has re-written its operating procedures surrounding the “shooting at moving vehicles” and “exhausting all alternatives before shooting.” Both of the shooting policies are under review for possible changes by APD’s policy review board. APD’s policy changes on the use of force and deadly force have been re written and have evolved over the last five years under the watchful eye of the federal Court Appointed Monitor James Ginger and his monitoring team.

Notwithstanding the passage of almost 6 years, APD continues to struggled with the implementation of all the mandated reforms and is still under a federal court ordered consent decree. Federal Court appointed Independent Monitor James Ginger in his 11th “Independent Monitor Reports” noted APD’s struggle to implement and maintain policy changes and he laid blame by stating that APD personnel

“were still failing to adhere to the requirements of the CASA found in past monitoring reports, including some instances moving beyond the epicenter of supervision to mid- and upper management levels of the organization. … Some in APD’s command levels continue to exhibit behaviors that “build bulwarks” [walls] preventing fair and objective discipline, including a process of attempting to delay and in some cases successfully delaying the oversight processes until the timelines for administering discipline had been exceeded. [The] delays prevented an effective remedial response to behavior that is clearly in violation of established policy.”

… Since the beginning of the CASA compliance process that there were a few at APD who were overtly resistant to the CASA. [The Monitor] in the past [has] found evidence of a “counter-CASA effect” among some at the supervisory, mid-management, and command levels at APD. Those who knowingly or subconsciously count themselves in this group are beginning to face pressure to change their assessment of the value of the CASA. In some cases [they] have faced reasonably prompt and appropriate corrective efforts from the current executive levels of the APD for behavior that is not congruent with the CASA. … This as an essential way forward if APD is to move into full compliance [with all the CASA mandated reforms]. The remaining issue is that this pressure is neither uniform nor persistent.”

See pages 4 and 303 of 11th Federal Monitors Report with the link to the entire report here:

https://www.justice.gov/usao-nm/file/1274006/download

COUNTER CASA EFFECT IDENTIFIED AS APD SARGEANTS AND LUITENANTS

It was in the Federal Monitors 10th audit report that the “Counter CASA” effect was fully explained. According to the Federal Monitor’s 10th report:

“Sergeants and lieutenants, at times, go to extreme lengths to excuse officer behaviors that clearly violate established and trained APD policy, using excuses, deflective verbiage, de minimis comments and unsupported assertions to avoid calling out subordinates’ failures to adhere to established policies and expected practice. Supervisors (sergeants) and mid-level managers (lieutenants) routinely ignore serious violations, fail to note minor infractions, and instead, consider a given case “complete”.

“Some members of APD continue to resist actively APD’s reform efforts, including using deliberate counter-CASA processes. For example:

• Sergeants assessed during this reporting period were “0 for 5” in some routine aspects of CASA-required field inspections;
• Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) disciplinary timelines, appear at times to be manipulated by supervisory, management and command levels at the area commands, letting known violations lie dormant until timelines for discipline cannot be met;”

EVOLUTION OF BLACK LIVES MATTER AND “#EIGHT CAN’T WAITE” METRICS

On August 9, 2014, Michael Brown Jr., an 18-year-old black man, was fatally shot by 28-year-old white Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson in the city of Ferguson, Missouri. A grand jury refused to indict Wilson, and the U.S. Justice Department decided not to file civil rights charges. Wilson later resigned.

The killing of Brown by police led to months, and sometimes violent protests. The Ferguson protests became the catalyst for the “Black Lives Matter” movement. The Black Lives Matter created “Campaign Zero”, which is a police reform campaign and which developed the “#8 Can’t Waite” program. “#8 Can’t Waite” is intended to provide swift and identified steps to respond to protests against police brutality without having to increase funding. The “#8 Can’t Waite” includes the banning choke-holds by police, changing reporting systems for use of force incidents by police, and requiring officers to intervene when they witness misconduct by another police officer.

All Police departments have standard operating procedures (SOP’s) on the use of force and deadly force and train their officers on those SOPs. Police Officers who follow the SOPs and training will not be subject to disciplinary action if the officer seriously injures a suspect or a bystander. An officer who violates the guidelines is faced with severe personnel disciplinary action, including suspension or termination.

Extensive media attention and public outrage usually accompanies the most egregious incidents of police where a civilian ends up dead or the police misconduct is so disturbing and obvious as to result in criminal charges against police officers. The best example of this in Albuquerque was the March 14, 2014 killing by APD SWAT Officers of mentally ill, homeless camper James Boyd in the Sandia Foothills.

The entire assault and killing of Boyd were captured on police lapel camera video that was the most critical evidence in the criminal trial of two APD SWAT police officers charged with murder. The jury trial resulted in a dead lock jury and the charges were dismissed by Bernalillo County District Attorney Raul Torrez. A civil law suit for wrongful death filed against the City by the Boyd family was settled for $5 million.

“#8 CAN’T WAITE” METRICS IN A NUTSHELL

The essence of “#Eight Can’t Waite” is 8 procedural rules, or metrics, that Campaign Zero claims decrease police violence by 72% . The 8 metrics are:

1. BAN CHOKE-HOLDS AND STRANGLEHOLDS BY POLICE TO SUBDUE SUSPECTS:

The best example as to why police should be banned from the use of choke-holds to subdue a suspect is the July 17, 2014, murder of African American Eric Garner, 43. Garner died after a white officer placed him in a choke-hold during an arrest for selling loose cigarettes. Garner repeated the words “I can’t breathe” 11 times while he was held in a choke hold. A grand jury declined to indict the police officer, or any others involved in the arrest. The city agreed to pay a $6 million civil settlement.

A chock hold is more of a self-defense tactic to get the upper hand in a fight more than it is a way to subdue someone. When police place a person in a choke hold or a stranglehold, its likely a suspect will suffer serious bodily injury, including brain injury caused by the reduced flow of blood to the brain, spinal cord or neck injury or even death. Police officers should not use choke holds as a means to subdue a suspect and they can be trained in other modes of restraint that will reduce serious bodily injury or deaths. For at least 30 years, most municipal police departments prohibit the use of choke holds.

2. REQUIRE THE USE OF DE-ESCALATION TACTICS BY POLICE

The use of de-escalation tactics by police mandates that police officers use their best efforts to secure their personal safety through distance and communication before resorting to force. This does not necessarily mandate the communication be an attempt to merely reason with a suspect that cannot be reasoned with but it does require the officer to use common sense in the approach to “communicate in an effort to de-escalate.”

3. REQUIRE WARNING BY POLICE BEFORE THEY SHOOT AT SOMEONE

Under United States Supreme Court rulings, there is no requirement that police give warnings before they shoot at a suspect. Many in law enforcement argue that such warnings give a suspect time to react and shoot and kill first.

In the 1980s, the United Stated Supreme Court issued the two landmark decisions of Tennessee v. Garner (link: https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-supreme-court/471/1.html ) and Graham v. Connor (link: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/490/386/ ) that established the framework for determining when deadly force by police officers is reasonable and can be used. Under the Supreme Court rulings, police officers are allowed to shoot under two circumstances:

A. To protect their life or the life of another innocent party. This is commonly referred to as the “defense-of-life” standard. Police are trained that when they draw their gun to discharge in self-defense, it is not to maim someone, but to kill. A common term used for the training is “one to the head, two to the body” meaning shoot for the head with the first shot followed by two shots to the chest of the suspect.

B. The second circumstance is to prevent a suspect from escaping. However, in order to discharge their weapon, the police officer must have probable cause to think the suspect poses a dangerous threat to others.

4. EXHAUST ALL OTHER MEANS BEFORE SHOOTING

What this refers to is that officers must evaluate the use of other reasonably available resources and techniques when determining whether to use deadly force. Deadly force is only to used when there is an imminent threat of death or serious injury to the officer or another person. Alternatives to use of deadly force would include the use of electric stun guns, rubber bullets, flash bang shells, tear gas, “police batons” or police canine to secure a resisting suspect.

https://reason.com/2017/04/06/when-cops-encounter-knives-what-should-t/

5. DUTY OF POLICE OFFERS TO INTERVENE

The “duty to intervene” rule mandates that “by standing or assisting” officers must step in if they observe a fellow officer using excessive force that they believe is not appropriate under the circumstance and formally requires the police officer to report such incidents to supervisors. Many police officers view this as “breaking the blue code of silence”, second guessing, or not backing up the actions of a fellow police officer. The derogatory term used by those opposed to such a policy is that it requires police officers to become “snitches” against a fellow officer and falls into the dangerous philosophy of “your either with me or against me” to avoid any and all accountability for police misconduct.

6. BAN SHOOTING AT MOVING VEHICLES

Shooting at moving vehicles can be dangerous to the public. A moving target means that a shot or shots may not hit the intended target. Stray shots that miss a target can kill or injure an innocent bystander or even a fellow police officer. Further, if a fleeing suspect is in fact hit, injured or killed, the vehicle being driven goes out of control and becomes an immediate danger to the public until it crashes or comes to a full stop. Most police departments restrict shooting at moving vehicles and allow it only for self defense when a vehicle is being driven toward an officer and a suspect is not fleeing the officer. The “8 Can’t Wait” calls for the banning of shootings at vehicles altogether.

7. REQUIRE THE “USE OF FORCE CONTINUUM”

The use of force continuum is a specific set of requirements governing what kinds of weapons can be used versus what levels of resistance. The “use of force continuum” describes the escalating series of actions a police officer may take to resolve a situation. The continuum has many levels, and officers are instructed to respond with a level of force appropriate to the situation at hand. The “use of force continuum” allows the officer to move from one part of the continuum to another in a matter of seconds requiring split second decisions that can be reactionary.

https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/use-force-continuum

8. REQUIRE COMPREHENSIVE REPORTING

Under the “#8 Can’t Wait” police procedural rules the comprehensive reporting requirement means that police officers need to report each time they use force or threaten to use force against a civilian. Such reporting in turn requires an officer’s immediate supervisor, such as a Sergeant or a Lieutenant, to review the report and determine if the “use of force” was in fact justified.

A link for more on #8Can’t Waite is here:

https://www.vox.com/2020/6/5/21280402/8-cant-wait-explained-policing-reforms

APD’S CONSENT DECREE RELATES TO TREATMENT OF MENTALLY ILL

On April 10, 2014, the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice (DOJ), issued its report of the 18-month civil rights investigation of the Albuquerque Police Department (APD). The DOJ reviewed excessive use of force and deadly force cases and found that APD engaged in a “pattern and practice” of unconstitutional “use of force” and “deadly force” and found a “culture of aggression” within APD.

On November 27, 2014, the City and the Department of Justice entered into the Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA). APD is one of 18 municipalities in the United States under a Federal Court consent decree for excessive use of force and deadly force. The link to the CASA is here:

https://www.cabq.gov/mental-health-response-advisory-committee/documents/court-approved-settlement-agreement-final.pdf

What differentiates the DOJ’s investigation of APD from all the other federal investigations of police departments and consent decrees is that the other consent decrees involve in one form or another the finding of “racial profiling” and use of excessive force or deadly force against minorities. The DOJ’s finding of a “culture of aggression” within APD dealt with APD’s interactions and responses to suspects that were mentally ill and that were having psychotic episodes. The deadly encounters have resulted in multi million dollar civil settlements, usually around $5 million. The DOJ’s investigation found APD’s policies, training, and supervision were insufficient to ensure that officers encountering people with mental illness or in distress do so in a manner that respected their rights and in a manner that was safe for all involved.

The City of Albuquerque entered into its Federal Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA) which mandates sweeping changes and reforms to APD. Over the last 5 years of implementing the mandated DOJ reforms, APD has made significant progress in implementing the reforms under the watchful eye of a Federal Court approved monitor. The reforms apply as much to the treatment of minorities as to the treatment of the mentally ill.

CASA REFORMS IMPLEMENTED

On November 14, 2020, it will be 6 full years that have expired since the city entered into the CASA with the DOJ. Based on a review of the Federal Monitor’s reports and news reports, the City and APD have completed the following 15 mandated reforms under the Court Approved Settlement Agreement:

1.After a full year of negotiations, new “use of force” and “use of deadly force” policies have been written, implemented and all APD sworn have received training on the policies.

2. All sworn police officers have received crisis management intervention training.

3. APD has created a “Use of Force Review Board” that oversees all internal affairs investigations of use of force and deadly force.

4. The Internal Affairs Unit has been divided into two sections, one dealing with general complaints and the other dealing with use of force incidents.

5. Sweeping changes ranging from APD’s SWAT team protocols, to banning choke-holds, to auditing the use of every Taser carried by officers and re-writing and implementation of new use of force and deadly force policies have been completed.

6. “Constitutional policing” practices and methods, and mandatory crisis intervention techniques and de-escalation tactics with the mentally ill have been implemented at the APD police academy with all sworn police having received training.

7. APD has adopted a new system to hold officers and supervisors accountable for all use of force incidents with personnel procedures implemented detailing how use of force cases are investigated.

8. APD has revised and updated its policies on the mandatory use of lapel cameras by all sworn police officers.

9. The Repeat Offenders Project, known as ROP, has been abolished.

10. Civilian Police Oversight Agency has been created, funded, fully staffed and a director hired.

11. The Community Policing Counsels (CPCs) have been created in all area commands and the CPCs meet monthly.

12. The Mental Health Advisory Committee has been implemented.

13. The CASA identified that APD was understaffed. The City and APD are spending $88 million dollars, over a four-year period, with 32 million dollars of recurring expenditures, to hire 322 sworn officers and grow the department to 1,200 officers. As of January 1, 2020, APD has 949 full time police officers, up from 878 sworn police. The expansion thus far is attributed primarily to hiring from other departments and returning to work APD retirees.

14. Under the terms and conditions of the CASA, once APD achieves a 95% compliance rate in 3 compliance areas, and maintains compliance for 2 years, the case can be dismissed. For the purposes of the APD monitoring process, “compliance” consists of three levels: primary, secondary, and operational compliance levels. In the 11th audit report that covered the time period of August 1, 2019 and ended in January 31, 2020, the federal monitor found APD was 100% in primary compliance, no change from 10th report, a 93% in secondary compliance, a change of 14.8% from the 10th report, and 66% in operational compliance, a change of 3%.

Primary Compliance relates mostly to development and implementation of acceptable policies and conforming to national practices. APD is now in 93% Secondary Compliance as of the 11th reporting period, which means that effective follow-up mechanisms are beginning to be taken to ensure that APD personnel understand the requirements of promulgated policies in the areas of training, supervising, coaching, and disciplinary processes to ensure APD personnel understand the policies as promulgated and are capable of implementing them in the field. APD is in 66% Operational Compliance with the requirements of the CASA, which means that 66% of the time, field personnel either perform tasks as required by the CASA, or that, when they fail, supervisory personnel note and correct in-field behavior that is not compliant with the requirements of the CASA.

15. According to the Use of Force Report for the years 2017 and 2018, APD’s “use of force” and “deadly force” is down dramatically , which was one of the primary objectives of the CASA reforms. For related article on use of force reports see:

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/03/27/apd-use-of-force-report-fails-to-report-on-crisis-intervention-incidents-involving-mentally-ill/

SPECIFIC AREAS WHERE MAJOR COMPLIANCE HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED

There are specific areas where major progress has been made by APD implementing the reforms and that actually dove-tail into one or more of the “#Eight Can’t Waite” metrics. Many of these areas were identified during the June 4 press conference. Those areas merit discussion:

1. MULTI-AGENCY TASK FORCE COMPLIANCE

The CASA requires APD to participate in a Multi-Agency Task Force (MATF) under a “memorandum of understanding” (MOU) with other law enforcement agencies to investigate APD officer involved shootings, serious use of force incidents and in custody deaths, and to provide final reports to prosecuting agencies with jurisdiction over any allege criminal conduct by police officers. New use of force “standard operating procedures” have become operative in early 2020. APD Internal Affairs Force Division (IAFD) is assuming responsibility for investigation Level 3 uses of force. The Monitor found operational compliance by APD with the MATF and MOU.

2. MENTAL HEALTH RESPONSE ADVISORY COMMITTEE (MHRAC)

The CASA requires the City and APD to establish a Mental Health Response Advisory Committee (MHRA) comprising of certain members and representatives from various entities or stakeholders including the UNM Psychiatric Department and providers to the homeless and to those who experience mental health crisis. In the 9th Independent Monitors Report (IMR), the Monitor found that the MHRAC continued to be one of the biggest success stories of APD’s community outreach under the CASA. The 10th IMR found operational compliance in this area.

3. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TRAINING

Under the CASA, the city and APD agreed to ensure that all APD Academy cadets, field officers and 911 emergency operators received behavioral health and crisis intervention training, including initial training of 40 hours and biannual update training. All such training has been completed. The 9th Independent Monitors report found that APD has continued to appropriately and effectively utilize training curricula that addresses field assessment, identification, suicide intervention, crisis de-escalation, community mental health participation and scenario-based exercise and role-playing exercises. The 10th Monitor’s Report found operational compliance with the behavioral health training mandates of the CASA.

There are 3 major programs that have been implemented to deal with the Albuquerque Police Department’s (APD) interactions with the mentally ill and substance abuse defendants. All 3 programs involve the training of police officers. All 3 programs have the potential to reduce or have reduced the use of excessive force and deadly force by APD.

The 3 APD programs are:

A. Project CIT-ECHO

CIT stands for Crisis Intervention Training and ECHO stands for Extension for Community Healthcare Options. In 2014, the CIT-ECHO project was launched by the city with a grant from the Department of Justice (DOJ) Bureau of Justice Assistance to raise awareness of how law enforcement should deal effectively with those struggling with mental health issues. The CIT-ECHO Program consists of weekly video conference workshops with APD and CIT officials.

B. The EPIC Program

The acronym “EPIC” stands for “Ethical Policing Is Courageous.” The EPIC program aims to stem police officer misconduct and use of force and deadly force by police officers. The program uses “hands-on scenarios” and role-playing enactments and demonstrations to teach police officers on how to defuse calls for service that start escalating and that could easily result in the use of excessive force or deadly force.

EPIC focuses on proactively preventing uses of force, rather than just punishing officers when damage is already done, including the killing of a suspect. The primary purpose of the EPIC program is to provide police officers with effective and proper training to learn just how and when to intervene when they themselves see other police officer misconduct. The EPIC program is designed to show police officers how to recognize problematic behavior in fellow officers that may trigger a fellow officer to engage in misconduct.

C. The “LEAD” Program

LEAD stands for “law enforcement assisted diversion” program. The LEAD Program allows APD officers to determine whether the person they’ve arrested needs to go to jail or would better benefit from a trip to a detox facility or a meeting with a case manager who can help them plug into services such as Medicaid, housing vouchers and substance abuse treatment. APD officers are given full discretion to decide to arrest people on low level charges or to rely on the LEAD diversion program. The main goal of the LEAD program is to send people to services before charges are ever filed which is unlike other court diversion efforts such as the Drug Court.

4. FIELD TRAINING OFFICER PROGRAM

The CASA requires APD to provide academy graduates with 16 weeks of field training following the academy. The Casa also states requirements for the training of field training officers and the training provided to cadets. The 9th and the 10th Independent Monitors Reports found 100% compliance with requiring cadets to complete 16 weeks of field officer training ensuring that the recruits are trained in multiple area commands, on different shifts and establishing a mechanism for confidential feedback.

5. STAFFING STUDY

The CASA originally required APD to conduct a staffing study to determine what level of sworn officers were required to carry out its functions. On December 11, 2015, the 62 page “Albuquerque Police Department Comprehensive Staffing Assessment and Resource Study” was released by the Alexander Weiss Consulting, LLC. The 10th Independent Monitor’s Report found that the staffing study analysis has become less relevant because of the sure passage of time. You can review the 2015 staffing report at this link:

https://www.cabq.gov/police/documents/monthly-reports/comprehensive-staffing-assessment-and-resource-study.pdf

6. RECRUITMENT AND SELECTION

Under the CASA, APD is required to develop a comprehensive recruitment and hiring program and a strategic recruitment plan that clearly identified goals of recruitment efforts. The recruitment plan must include specific strategies for attracting a diverse group of applicants. In response to the CASA mandates, APD is undertaking an aggressive expansion of APD and to recruit 100 police officers a year for 4 years with the goal of having 1,200 sworn police. The Keller Administration is spending $88 million dollars over a 4 year period along with $33 million in none recurring expenditures to grow the department and to implement the DOJ reforms. There are currently 61 sworn police assigned to compliance for the CASA.

The CASA has mandates relating to the recruitment of new cadets and lateral hires from other law enforcement departments. According to the CASA, APD’s hiring and selection process must be based on objective minimum standards that comport with best practices and applicable anti-discrimination laws. Under the CASA, all APD recruits must undergo psychological, medical, polygraph, and drug testing and be subject to background investigations dealing with credit history, employment history, prior use of lethal force and less lethal force and force training and complaint history. An annual recruitment report is also mandated under the CASA. Independent Monitor Reports 9 and 10 found that APD has been in operational compliance with the recruitment and selection requirements of the CASA.

7. PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS AND PROMOTIONAL POLICIES

The CASA has requirements for APD’s performance evaluation and promotional policies. The requirements are that:

“APD shall develop a fair and consistent performance evaluation system that reviews particular areas relating to constitutional policing, community policing and more.”

The performance evaluation system under the CASA must be formal and supervisors must be held accountable for failing to timely complete performance evaluations. Supervisors are required to meet with reporting officers, discuss the evaluations and develop work plans. Independent Monitor Reports 9 and 10 found that APD has been in operational compliance for the past two years with the performance evaluations and promotional policies of the CASA.

ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY

Both Mayor Tim Keller and CAO Sarita Nair mislead when they tout APD’s success with the DOJ reforms but then failed to disclose that the “Counter CASA Effect” is interfering with implementing the DOJ reforms. By extension, the Counter Casa Effect is also interfering either directly or indirectly all the “#Eight Can’t Waite” metrics.

In his 10th and 11th reports, the Federal Court appointed monitor made it clear that there are many within APD that are overtly resistant to reforms. The Monitor has found evidence of a “counter-CASA effect” among some at the supervisory, mid-management, and command levels at APD. Notwithstanding, both Mayor Keller and CAO Nair have refused to take aggressive action and remove those in the chain of command that are resistant to police reforms.

The following portion of Federal Monitors 10th report merits emphasis by repeating:

“Sergeants and lieutenants, at times, go to extreme lengths to excuse officer behaviors that clearly violate established and trained APD policy, using excuses, deflective verbiage, de minimis comments and unsupported assertions to avoid calling out subordinates’ failures to adhere to established policies and expected practice. Supervisors, sergeants, and mid-level managers, lieutenants, routinely ignore serious violations, fail to note minor infractions, and instead, consider a given case “complete”.

“Some members of APD continue to resist actively APD’s reform efforts, including using deliberate counter-CASA processes. For example:
• Sergeants assessed during this reporting period were “0 for 5” in some routine aspects of CASA-required field inspections;
• Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) disciplinary timelines, appear at times to be manipulated by supervisory, management and command levels at the area commands, letting known violations lie dormant until timelines for discipline cannot be met;”

APD sergeants and lieutenants, even though they are part of management with supervisory authority over sworn police officers, are not “at will” employees and they are allowed to join the police union. Including sergeants and lieutenants in the union bargaining unit creates a clear conflict within management and sends mixed messages to rank and file sworn police officers.

APD police sergeants and lieutenants are on the front line to enforce personnel rules and regulations, standard operating procedures, approve and review work performed and assist in implementing DOJ reforms and standard operating procedures policies. They are where the “rubber meets the road” when it comes to police reforms. The point that has been repeatedly made by the Federal Monitor is that “until the sergeants are in harness and pulling in the same direction as the chief, things won’t get done as quickly”. In other words, without the 100% support of the sergeants and lieutenants to the CASA mandated reforms, there will be little or no progress made with police reforms.

Mayor Keller and CAO Sarita Nair should have demanded from the very beginning of the Keller Administration that the management positions of APD sergeant and lieutenant be removed from the APOA Union bargaining unit. It is more than likely they did not and will not because the police union became extremely active in Keller’s campaign for Mayor in 2017 and endorsed him. The police union will likely do the exact same thing next year as Keller seeks a second term.

Sergeants and lieutenants need to be made at will employees and removed from the police union bargaining unit in order to get a real buy in to management’s goals of police reform and the CASA. APD Police sergeants and lieutenants cannot serve two masters of Administration Management and Union priorities that are in conflict when it comes to the CASA reforms and the #8 Cant’s Waite metrics . Until sergeants and lieutenants are removed from the union and made at will employees, do not expect the CASA reforms or the #8 Can’t Waite” metrics to be accomplished any time soon.

Mayor Tim Keller is now at a crossroad. The very lucrative two year Police Union Contract that provided for substantial raises and longevity pay increases will soon expire. Mayor Keller can order his administration to seek removal of sergeants and lieutenants from the bargaining unit and refuse to sign another contract with the police union until that is done, or just slam the door on any such discussion and continue to give the Police Union any and all it wants as far as concessions. Mayor Keller should begin the discussions by making it clear he will not seek, nor does he want, the APOA Union endorsement at least until the Court Approved Settlement Agreement reforms are 100% implemented and the case is dismissed, and all causes of action, with prejudice.

________________________________

POSTSCRIPT

Below are links to previous blog articles on the CASA and the Federal Monitors Audit Reports:

https://www.petedinelli.com/2020/06/01/rage-across-america-over-george-floyd-murder-including-albuquerque-apds-response-reflect-doj-reforms-are-working-what-are-we-failing-to-hear/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2020/05/06/federal-monitor-files-11th-compliance-audit-report-of-apd-reforms-counter-casa-effect-still-problematic-order-100-operational-compliance-within-6-months-or-replace-chief-or-deput/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/11/07/10th-federal-monitors-compliance-report-counter-casa-affect-alive-and-well-within-apd-remove-to-dismiss-union-from-case-remove-sergeants-and-lieutenants-from-police-unio/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2020/01/13/city-moves-to-be-released-from-portions-doj-consent-decree-and-monitoring-commentary-intent-and-purpose-of-decree-accomplished-dismiss-case/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/08/23/apoa-police-union-is-counter-casa-affect-within-apd-remove-sergeants-and-lieutenants-from-union-kudos-to-apd-chief-michael-geier-on-reforms/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/08/19/convoluted-federal-monitors-third-outcomes-measures-and-analysis-report-red-flag-for-another-4-million-contract-trump-doj-has-all-but-ended-federal-police-reform-dismiss-abq/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/05/08/ninth-apd-federal-monitors-report-filed-negotiate-dismissal-of-casa/

Out Of Crisis And Chaos Comes Opportunity; Governor MLG Creates “Council for Racial Justice”; We Can And Must End Racism, And End It Now

On June 4, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, with protests over race-related issues intensifying around New Mexico and the nation, said it’s time to address the “ugly truth” of racism embedded in core institutions. During a press conference announcing a Council for Racial Justice Lujan Grisham said:

“We have a tendency to wrap ourselves in that particular cloak and pretend sometimes that we don’t have the kind of inequalities, institutional racism and hatred that exists. We have institutional racism embedded in every construct in American society. The fact you might not see it every day means you’re not looking for it every day. It exists.”

The Governor announced at a news conference with African American community leaders that she wants to identify policy changes to deal with racism and will create a Council for Racial Justice and appoint a racial justice czar within the Governor’s office. The council has yet to be appointed, but it will include former state Treasurer James Lewis and House Majority Leader Sheryl Williams Stapleton, D-Albuquerque. Other members will include state Cabinet secretaries, law enforcement officials and leaders from the state’s African American, Native American, Hispanic and Asian American communities.

Lujan Grisham said all New Mexico leaders, including herself, must start by listening more and talking less. During the press conference, Alexandria Taylor of the New Mexico Coalition of Sexual Assault Programs said black New Mexicans were hurting after the high-profile deaths of several African Americans in recent months and said:

“It is time for us to come together, not be further divided.”

Donna Maria Davis, the pastor of the Grant Chapel A.M.E. Church in Albuquerque, said the commitment to addressing structural inequalities has to be sustained in order for it to make a difference and said:

“We can’t afford to be not racist. … We have to be anti-racist. [younger New Mexicans should be included on the council]. They deserve a life that’s worth living and not a life that’s full of fear.”

Below are links to related news coverage on the Council for Racial Justice:

https://www.abqjournal.com/1463093/gov-lujan-grisham-to-hold-news-briefing-on-racism-systemic-injustice.html

https://www.koat.com/article/gov-lujan-grisham-to-address-racism-and-systemic-injustice-in-nm/32771815

https://www.kob.com/new-mexico-news/gov-lujan-grisham-forms-council-to-shed-light-on-racial-problems/5751291/?utm_campaign=thumbnails&utm_source=zetaglobal&utm_medium=onsite

ROLE OF LAW ENFORCEMENT

The Governor’s reaction and creation of the Council for Racial Justice is no doubt in reaction in part to the protests and demonstrations around the United States and in New Mexico that have been ignited with the killing of 46-year-old George Floyd. The governor suggested expanded conflict de-escalation training for New Mexico law enforcement recruits and an overhaul of probation and parole rules could be among the changes pursued in the coming months.

The Governor acknowledged that expanded conflict de-escalation training for law enforcement is not the only thing that must be addressed. Racial profiling is also problematic. New Mexico has a 2009 bias-based profiling law that bans law enforcement from investigating someone based on their race, ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation. The state law requires that law enforcement agencies develop policies and training protocols dealing with racial profiling.

Notwithstanding the state law a few New Mexico cities have faced allegations of racial police practices. The Hobbs Police Department has faced claims from several former officers alleging police officials targeted enforcement efforts at black and Hispanic communities in the city. In addition, New Mexico has placed either first or second in the nation for its rate of deadly shootings by law enforcement officers in recent years.

The governor also alluded to Albuquerque’s history with police use-of-force issues that led to a 2014 settlement agreement after the U.S. Department of Justice found the Albuquerque Police Department had a pattern of violating people’s rights through the use of excessive force.

APD AND THE DOJ

The Albuquerque Police Department is one of the 18 municipalities in the United States under a Federal Court consent decree for excessive use of force and deadly force. On April 10, 2014, the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice (DOJ), issued its report of the 18-month civil rights investigation of the Albuquerque Police Department (APD). The DOJ reviewed excessive use of force and deadly force cases and found that APD engaged in a “pattern and practice” of unconstitutional “use of force” and “deadly force” and found a “culture of aggression” within APD.

What differentiates the DOJ’s investigation of APD from all the other federal investigations of police departments and consent decrees is that the other consent decrees involve in one form or another the finding of “racial profiling” and use of excessive force or deadly force against minorities. The DOJ’s finding of a “culture of aggression” within APD dealt with APD’s interactions and responses to suspects that were mentally ill and that were having psychotic episodes. The investigation found APD’s policies, training, and supervision were insufficient to ensure that officers encountering people with mental illness or in distress do so in a manner that respected their rights and in a manner that was safe for all involved.

In November, 2014, the City of Albuquerque entered into its Federal Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA) mandating sweeping changes and reforms to APD. Over the last 5 years of implementing the mandating DOJ reforms, APD has made progress in implementing the reforms under the watchful eye of a Federal Court approved monitor. The reforms apply as much to the treatment of minorities as to the treatment of the mentally ill.

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

In his speech, “The Other America,” from 1953, the Reverend Martin Luther King said the following:

“I think America must see that riots do not develop out of thin air. In the final analysis, the riot is the language of the unheard. What is it that America has failed to hear? … In a sense, our nation’s summers of riots are caused by our winter’s delay. And as long as America postpones justice, we stand in the position of having these occurrences of riots and violence over and over again. Social justice and progress are the absolute guarantors of riot prevention.”

Sixty-seven years later, we are still asking “What is it that America has failed to hear?” The words of Dr. King have been proven true once again with the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis Police Officer and the protests that have ensued across the country.

We must finally do something about ending racism once and for all for ourselves and for the sake of our future generations. As individuals, we must, in some manner, make it very clear to all who we interact with, our families and friends alike, and people we work with that racism is not tolerated on any level and it must be condemned in no uncertain terms.

Our law enforcement community must understand with complete clarity that police brutality, excessive use of force and deadly force based on racial profiling and the presumption of guilt because of a person’s color and not evidence will not be tolerated. No Hispanic, no African American and no person of color should ever feel uncomfortable talking to any police officer or feel they cannot call the police to ask for help or to report a crime. Police must recognize that performing their motto to “serve and protect” is not determined by skin color.

Out of crisis and chaos can come opportunity. Once again, we have an opportunity to look within ourselves and acknowledge the racism in this country is very real, very pervasive and tearing our communities and our country apart. We must look within ourselves and our communities and finally do something about it to end racism once and for all.

As citizens of a free country, we must seize this opportunity and reach out to virtually all communities of color more than ever before and work together to end racism in this country and for our future generations. As individuals, we must, in some manner, make it very clear to all who we interact with at work and in our daily lives, our families and friends alike, that racism is not and will not be tolerated on any level and it must be condemned in no uncertain terms.

Joe Monahan’s Blog Reports And Analysis On June 2, 2020 Primary Election Results

On June 3 AND June 4, political commentator Joe Monahan on his political blog “New Mexico Politics With Joe Monahan”, posted two excellent article summarizing the final outcome of the 2020New Mexico midterms and the resulting long term political repercussions. As usual, Mr. Monahan provides a number of revelations that only he is able to provide because of his news sources developed over 30 years in the business.
The link to the full blog is: http://joemonahansnewmexico.blogspot.com/

Following are excerpts from Mr. Monahan’s June 3 and 4 blog articles. The Postscript to this article contains final vote results of the federal races and Bernalillo County races.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3 NEW MEXICO POLITICS WITH JOE MONAHAN

HEADLINE: Dr. No Bites The Dust As The Conservative Senate Coalition Crumbles; Papen Also Ousted; Herrell Trounces Chase For Congress Nod, Ronchetti Takes GOP Senate Primary; Leger Fernandez Wins; Appears Headed To Congress

We had one prediction right about Primary Election 2020–that most of the excitement would be near the bottom of the ballot not the top. It wasn’t only exciting, it was jaw dropping news that we delivered (exclusively) to the state via our KANW-89.1 FM broadcast in the late night hours Tuesday. . .

They drove a Mack truck through the conservative coalition that commands the state Senate, toppling the most powerful legislator of them all—Senate Finance Committee Chairman John Arthur Smith as well as Senate President Pro Tem Mary Kay Papen, Clemente Sanchez of Grants, and Senator Gabe Ramos of Silver City. There are still some votes to be counted but our expert panel called the races knowing where the remaining votes are and how many.

The losses left state politics watchers breathless as the status quo was thrown into disarray and the full impact to be gauged in the days ahead. The coalition that has thwarted Dem liberals for years was put on life support. Of the five Senators targeted by progressive groups only Gallup’s George Munoz survived.

The loss of Smith alone is enough to change the fiscal direction of the state. His power as finance chair had grown immensely in recent years. He brushed off Governors as if they were a fly on his shoulder.
But progressives banded together and spent well over a million dollars targeting the coalition, exposing its weaknesses and thumping it to the ground. Those involved in the historic takedown relished the moment with one of them declaring:

The hubris of old school Democrats was their downfall. They were out of touch with voters and unwilling to listen and adapt to changes in the electorate and society. They got plenty of warning when Rio Arriba State Rep. Debbie Rodella was ousted and then Rep. Carl Trujillo but they didn’t heed the warning and they paid the price.

Smith is 78 and Papen 88, hardly ages at which you make major changes.

The Smith loss absolutely stunned the business community that had fallen hard for him for his support of tax cuts. But now, according to one of our Roundhouse wall-leaners:

New Mexico has been following the Reagan philosophy for decades that informed Smith and his ilk that tax cuts and rolling back public spending were a panacea regardless of the outcome. It was their religion. That is over now. Data can be used to solve problems instead of following the trickle down Gods that failed to improve the lives of New Mexicans. Also, where does this leave David Abbey, Smith’s powerful counterpart who is the director of the Legislative Finance Committee?

The coalition killers were all women. Neomi Martinez-Parra felled the giant Smith; Siah Correa Hemphill knocked out Ramos; Dem activist Pam Cordova ejected Sanchez and Carrie Hamblen took out Papen. They still have to beat Republicans in November but given the trend primary night they all look like good bets. They benefited from a higher than normal turnout and will again in the high voting presidential election.

OLD NORTH GONE

Dem Sen. Richard Martinez, who sometimes joined with the conservative Dems–like on abortion–was put out of office by Rio Arriba County Commission Leo Jaramillo. It turned out that the brutal and embarrassing video of Martinez’s DWI arrest ended his career the day it was released. We just didn’t know it–until last night. The old North is gone. It no longer finds charming the wayward ways of senior politicos.

OTHER RACES

The stunning state senate returns made the other contests appear like wall flowers and they came in as expected.

Former TV weatherman Mark Ronchetti easily win the GOP US Senate nomination, garnering 55 percent in a three way race. Ronchetti will challenge Dem Rep. Ben Ray Lujan for the open Senate seat. Yvette Herrell easily handled Claire Chase to win the southern GOP congressional nomination, dominating Chase 45 to 32. She will face Rep. Torres Small in November. Teresa Leger Fernandez put away Valerie Plame and five others by scoring 42 percent of the vote to Plame’s 23. She will face Republican Alexis Johnson but the district is solid Dem. Michelle Garcia Holmes is the Republican who will have the difficult task of trying to oust popular ABQ Dem Congresswoman Deb Haaland. Garcia beat two foes to win the GOP nod.

ALLIGATOR ALLEY

Some of the progressives basking in their victory are going a bit overboard on our Alligators who did not predict the Senate sweep but instead forecast a more modest gain of perhaps two progressive senators not four. Is that so awful?

All we can say to the critics is: Did any among them predict on the public record what happened Tuesday night? The answer is no. And did any of them predict Trump would win the presidency in 2016? No. Predictions are fun and entertaining but not to be taken to the bank. The Alligators are not “toothless” as one of the critics blasted. They just get their teeth knocked in once in a while because they are willing to show them.

There was much more action but we were on the air well past midnight and now it’s much later (or earlier) so for now we’ll let you catch up with the rest of the results at the Secretary of State and the Bernalillo County Clerk sites:

https://electionresults.sos.state.nm.us/

https://bce.sks.com/

THURSDAY JUNE 4 NEW MEXICO POLITICS WITH JOE MONAHAN

Who will take over the chairmanship of the powerful Senate Finance Committee now that John Arthur Smith has been defeated?

Sen. George Munoz, the only one of five Senators targeted by progressives who survived Tuesday, is vice-chairman and will work to be named chairman. But Sen. Nancy Rodriguez, a budget maven from Santa Fe and a 25 year Senate veteran, is emerging as a favorite in progressive circles. She doesn’t have the Munoz baggage and would give the committee a fresh start and a more liberal lean. Also, she would be a Hispanic female face in a Senate leadership that currently lacks them.

Who will be the next President Pro Tem?

The crucial position that determines the committee assignments of senators? Sen. Mary Kay Papen has long held the post, voted in with the help of Republicans, but now it appears with her defeat and the death of the conservative Senate coalition that it will be an all Democratic decision. The race to replace her is already underway.

The names of ABQ Senator Daniel Ivey-Soto and Pete Campos of Las Vegas are high on the list. Ivey-Soto was denied the chairmanship of Senate Judiciary by Papen who gave the prize to Sen. Cervantes, an old family friend, so Ivey-Soto is looking to advance. Campos once challenged Papen for the post and lost. But his vote against repealing an outdated abortion statute became a key issue in the campaign against the four conservative Dem Senators defeated Tuesday. Progressives fielded an opponent against Campos because of that vote but he won re-election, garnering 70 percent. Another player: Linda Lopez. Pro Tem? Majority Leader?

Will legalized marijuana now make a comeback?

It could. The new likely Senators are for it. The 2021 session could be the year the pot backers finally win the day after failing to advance their cause this year.

Will the proposed constitutional amendment to tap the Land Grant Permanent Fund for very early childhood education be another measure that finally sees life now that the coalition is passing into history?

Backers say they see it passing in the 2021 session, having a special election after the session for voter approval and taking effect before July 1, 2021 in time for the start of the budget year.

Don’t expect much infighting at the June 18 special legislative session to address the budget crisis.

The fight is out of Smith and his allies. They will approve moving some of the state’s $1.9 billion in reserve to the general fund as well as available federal monies. The Governor will have a few other items to address, including a small business loan relief package.

Taxes could be the fly in the ointment for MLG.

Progressives could starting demanding tax hikes to avoid budget cuts, an uncomfortable position for a Governor who adheres mainly to the middle of the road.

Will Democrats make inroads into GOP held state Senate seats in the ABQ area?

They are more confident about taking out GOP Senators Candace Gould and Senator Sander Rue after Tuesday’s primary results. They believe they also have a shot at taking the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Bill Payne in the ABQ NE Heights. R’s will be playing defense as they try to avoid a repeat of the ’18 disaster when they lost all their Bernalillo County House seats except one.

Topics that could rise to the top under the new policy order

Gun control, a roll back of the Martinez-Richardson tax cuts, an increase in the minimum wage, more resources to combat child abuse and a focus on the Navajo Reservation where the coronavirus has raged. And, of course, a repeal of that outdated abortion law that coalition Democrats defeated and which was partly responsible for their defeats. Do you think that measure may now pass?

You can E-mail your news and comments to Joe Monahan at newsguy@yahoo.com.

The link to New Mexico Politics With Joe Monahan is here:

http://joemonahansnewmexico.blogspot.com/

_________________________________

POSTSCRIPT

FINAL ELECTION VOTE RESULTS

Following are the election vote results in Federal Offices. (**** denotes party nominee)

UNITED STATES SENATOR

DEMOCRAT

BEN R LUJAN (DEM), 196,460 100% ****

REPUBLICAN

ELISA MARIA MARTINEZ (REP), 39,443 26.20%
MARK V RONCHETTI (REP), 84,645 56.23% ****
GAVIN S CLARKSON (REP) 26,453 17.57%

UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE – DISTRICT 1

DEMOCRAT

DEB HAALAND (DEM) 74,316 100% ****

REPUBLICAN

MICHELLE GARCIA HOLMES (REP) 22,057 48% ****
JARED R VANDER DUSSEN (REP) 18,542 40.35%
BRETT KOKINADIS (REP) 5,353 11.65

UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 2

DEMOCRAT

XOCHITL TORRES SMALL (DEM) 47,056 100% ****

REPUBLICAN

YVETTE HERRELL (REP) 26,650 47.74% ****
CLAIRE CHASE (REP) 18,786 31.54%
CHRIS MATHYS (REP) 14,132 23.72%

UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT – DISTRICT 3

DEMOCRAT

TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ (DEM) 34,356 41.15% ****
LAURA M MONTOYA (DEM) 5,652 6.77%
MARCO PETER SERNA (DEM) 6,970 8.35%
JOSEPH L SANCHEZ (DEM) 10,810 12.95%
VALERIE E PLAME (DEM) 20,526 24.59%
JOHN BLAIR (DEM) 3,651 4.37%
KYLE J TISDEL (DEM) 1,524 1.83%

REPUBLICAN

HARRY B MONTOYA (REP) 14,658 34.84%
KAREN EVETTE BEDONIE (REP) 11,837 28.13%
ALEXIS M JOHNSON (REP) 15,580 37.03% ****
ANGELA GALE MORALES (write in) (REP) 0%

FOLLOWING ARE THE ELECTION VOTE RESULTS IN BERNALILLO COUNTY OFFICES (**** denotes primary winner.)

BERNALILLO COUNTY TREASURER

DONNY ALBERT DANIELS (DEM) 3,357
NANCY MARIE BEARCE (DEM) 28,624 ****
PATRICK J PADILLA (DEM) 15,098
BERNADETTE M SANCHEZ (DEM) 25,520

BERNALILLO COUNTY COMMISSIONER DISTRICT 2

STEVEN MICHAEL QUEZADA (DEM) 5,979 ****
FRANK A BACA (DEM) 4,592

BERNALILLO COUNTY COMMISSIONER DISTRICT 3

ADRIAN NEAL CARVER (DEM) 4,611
MARCOS A GONZALES (DEM) 4,201
ADRIANN BARBOA (DEM) 6,250 ****

Bernalillo County Commissioner DISTRICT 4

Democratic (candidate unopposed and party nominee for general election)

Wende Schwingendorf

REPUBLICAN

E TIM CUMMINS (REP) 3,642
SEAN N KESANI (REP) 1,353
GEORGE WALTON BENSON (REP) 6,202 ****
TINA M TOMLIN (REP) 1,799

SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT JUDGE, DIVISION 6

DANIEL E RAMCZYK (DEM) 35,928 ****
EDWARD L BENAVIDEZ (DEM) 33,629

“What is it that America has failed to hear?”; Shameful Litany Of Unarmed African Americans Killed By Police

“I think America must see that riots do not develop out of thin air. In the final analysis, the riot is the language of the unheard. What is it that America has failed to hear? … In a sense, our nation’s summers of riots are caused by our winter’s delay. And as long as America postpones justice, we stand in the position of having these occurrences of riots and violence over and over again. Social justice and progress are the absolute guarantors of riot prevention.”

The Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. “The Other America,” 1953.

Sixty-seven years later, we are still asking “What is it that America has failed to hear?” The murder of George Floyd has ignited protests across the country, with the peaceful protests overshadowed by the violent protests. George Floyd was murdered by someone who took an oath to “protect and serve” the public. The resulting protests are a pressure cooker that has blown up in our faces. A pressure cooker filled with frustration and anger over the racial injustice and inequities endured for decades by African Americans at the hands of law enforcement.

George Floyd is now another name on the extensive litany of unarmed African Americans killed by police. It must stop. Justice must be served for the murders and people of color must feel safe within our country. Rather than seek to unite the country and try to heal the wounds of racism, Trump stokes division and violence showing he is not fit to be President.

DISPROPORTIONATE KILLINGS OF AFRICAN AMERICANS BY POLICE

Data collected by the Washington Post on the use of lethal force by police officers since 2015 indicate that, relative to the proportion of the population, African Americans represent the minority killed the most by police. According to the US Census estimates, Blacks make up 12% of the population. However, from 2015 – 2019 they accounted for 26.4% of those that were killed by police under all circumstances. In other words, Blacks were the victims of the lethal use of force by police at nearly twice their rate in the general population. Whites do make up the majority of victims of police use of lethal force at 50.3% from 2015 – 2019, but whites make up the majority of the population at 61% while the black population is 12%.

SHAMEFUL LITANY OF UNARMED AFRICAN AMERICANS KILLED BY POLICE

George Floyd is now part of the alarming litany of unarmed African Americans killed by police in the last 6 years. Following is a list of the high-profile deaths of blacks in the U.S. since 2014 involving police arrests, encounters or police investigations:

Freddie Gray: Six Baltimore officers were involved in the arrest and in-custody death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man who died after being injured in a Baltimore police van, touching off weeks of protest.

Sam Dubose: A judge in July, 2015, dismissed charges against Ray Tensing, a white former University of Cincinnati officer who fatally shot Sam DuBose, an unarmed black motorist, during a 2015 traffic stop.

Philando Castile: St. Anthony, Minnesota, officer Jeronimo Yanez was acquitted of manslaughter in the fatal shooting of Philando Castile, a black motorist who had just informed the officer that he was carrying a gun.

Terence Crutcher: In Oklahoma, a jury found white Tulsa police officer Betty Jo Shelby not guilty of first-degree manslaughter in the 2016 death of Terence Crutcher, 40, who was shot shortly after Shelby arrived to find Crutcher’s SUV stopped in the middle of the road.

Alton Sterling: Federal prosecutors announced they would not seek charges against two white police officers who were involved in a deadly encounter with Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The killing was captured on cellphone video and circulated widely online, sparking demonstrations across the city.

Jamar Clark: Two white officers, Mark Ringgenberg and Dustin Schwarze, were trying to arrest the 24-year-old when he was shot once in the head. He died a day later. Some witnesses said Clark was handcuffed when he was shot, but federal and state probes concluded that he was not. Investigators said Ringgenberg felt Clark’s hand trying to grab his weapon and shouted to Schwarze, who then shot Clark.

Jeremy McDole: McDole was a 28-year-old Black-American paraplegic who was shot and killed by police in Wilmington, Delaware. McDole was in a wheelchair at the time of the shooting. Police were dispatched after a 911 call about a man with a gun. The incident escalated when police, standing 25 to 30 feet away with their guns drawn and pointing at McDole, repeatedly instructed McDole to raise his hands. When McDole started reaching for his waist area, police opened fire and killed him. According to police, a .38-caliber pistol was found on McDole after the shooting. Relatives of McDole have stated that he was unarmed. Video footage taken on a cellphone showed McDole shuffling in his chair and moving his hands with no gun clearly showing while officers ordered him several times to put his hands up.

William Chapman II: Former Portsmouth, Va., police officer Stephen Rankin was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for fatally shooting William Chapman II while responding to a shoplifting call outside a Walmart on April 22, 2015.

Walter Scott: Former North Charleston, S.C., patrolman Michael Slager was sentenced to 20 years in prison for shooting of Walter Scott, 50. Slager had stopped Scott for a broken brake light. Slager claimed he opened fire because he felt threatened after the motorist tried to take his stun gun during a struggle. A bystander captured the encounter on video and the judge found that Slager had obstructed justice by lying to investigators. Slager, 36, is one of the few U.S. police officers in recent years to receive prison time for an on-duty shooting. In a a cellphone video, Walter Scott appears to be running away from patrolman Michael Slager. The video appears to show Slager shooting a fleeing Scott several times in the back.

Eric Harris: Former Tulsa County volunteer sheriff’s deputy Robert Bates, 74, was sentenced to four years in prison for second-degree manslaughter in the death of Eric Harris, 44, who was unarmed and restrained. Bates, who is white, has said he confused his stun gun with his handgun and shot Harris. That shooting led to the temporary suspension of the reserve deputy program after a report found poor training of the volunteer officers, a lack of oversight and cronyism.

Tamir Rice: Tamir Rice, 12, was fatally shot by a white Cleveland police officer in a recreational area. Officers were responding to a report of a man waving a gun. The boy had a pellet gun tucked in his waistband and was shot after the officers’ cruiser skidded to a stop, just feet away from the child.

Akai Gurley: Rookie New York City police officer Peter Liang was convicted of manslaughter in the death of 28-year-old Akai Gurley. Liang, an American of Chinese descent, said he was patrolling a public housing high-rise with his gun drawn when a sound startled him and he fired accidentally. A bullet ricocheted off a wall, hitting and killing Gurley.

Michael Brown: Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, was fatally shot by a white officer, Darren Wilson, in in Ferguson, Mousori. A grand jury declined to indict Wilson, and the U.S. Justice Department opted against civil rights charges. Wilson later resigned. The death of Brown led to months of sometimes violent protests and became a catalyst for the Black Lives Matter movement.

Eric Garner: Eric Garner, 43, died after a white officer placed him in a chokehold during an arrest for selling loose cigarettes. Garner repeated the words “I can’t breathe” 11 times while lying face down on the sidewalk. A grand jury declined to indict that officer, or any others involved in the arrest. The city agreed to pay a $6 million civil settlement.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/list-police-related-deaths-usa-1.4438618

Breonna Taylor: In mid-March, police officers barged into Breonna Taylor’s home in Louisville, Kentucky, in the middle of the night and discharged a spray of bullets that struck and killed the 26-year-old EMT. Taylor, 26, and her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, were in bed when they heard the officers enter at around 12:40 a.m. According to the search warrant, police believed a suspected drug dealer named Jamarcus Glover, who did not live with Taylor and had already been arrested elsewhere, was keeping drugs or money at her house.

Ahmaud Arbery: Arbery was a 25-year-old black man who was out jogging and was chased by armed white residents of a South Georgia neighborhood. After police officers found Arbery bleeding out in the middle of the Satilla Shores neighborhood, the then-police chief John Powell sent a frantic text message wrote in all caps saying “GUNSHOT – 219 SATILLA DR – OFFICER CALLED THE SCENE OF CONSTRUCTION SITE WITH MALE TRESPASSING. … OFFICER ARRIVED AND HEARD SHOTS FIRED.” There was no mention of a burglary in the text message, even though Arbery’s mother said the day of the shooting she was told her son was shot by a homeowner in the middle of him burglarizing a home. Video released months after the shooting showed Arbery was shot and killed during a struggle over a shotgun pulled on him by Travis McMichael. According to the original police report, Greg McMichael said he and his son saw Arbery running past their home, got their guns, got in their trucks and tried to find him in the neighborhood. The men followed behind a running Arbery for more than four minutes. Initially, Police chose to believe Greg McMichael rather than investigate the incident as a murder.

https://www.news4jax.com/news/georgia/2020/05/29/text-messages-show-how-glynn-county-police-chief-reacted-shortly-after-ahmaud-arbery-shooting/

TRUMP’S HISTORY OF RACISM

President Trump’s use of military force to quell protesters angry and frustrated over the racial injustice and inequities endured by African Americans at the hands of law enforcement should come as no surprise to anyone. Trump has a well-documented history of racism years before he was elected, while he was running and since being elected President.

President Trump’s racism dates back to 1973 when his housing management company was the target of a Department of Justice (DOJ) Civil Rights Division civil lawsuit over allegations that he and his father as real estate developers were keeping black and Puerto Rican people out of their apartments.

It was in 1989 that Donald Trump purchased newspaper ads calling for the death penalty for the “Central Park Five,” four black men and one Latino man accused of rape who were later exonerated by DNA evidence and released after being exonerated as not committing the crime. During the 2016 presidential election, Trump still insisted the “Central Park Five” were guilty.

For at least eight (8) years, Donald Trump was front and center of the “birther movement” and questioned former President Barack Obama’s American citizenship thereby questioning Obama’s legitimacy as President of the United States. In 2011, Trump called on President Obama to release his birth certificate and went as far as to offer to give $5 million to one of Obama’s charity of choice if he released his college records and passport.

In 2015 when Donald Trump announced his bid for the presidency, he said “When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending the best. They’re not sending you, they’re sending people that have lots of problems and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bring crime. They’re rapists… And some, I assume, are good people.”

During the Presidential election, Trump said “I will build a great wall – and nobody builds walls better than me, believe me – and I’ll build them very inexpensively. I will build a great, great wall on our southern border, and I will make Mexico pay for that wall. Mark my words.”

In May 2016 during the presidential campaign, Trump suggested United States Federal Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who was born and raised in the United States and who oversaw the class action lawsuit against Trump University, was biased against Trump due to his “Mexican” heritage claiming American born Curiel was from Mexico.

During a campaign stop, Trump looked over a crowd and ask out loud to the crowd of supporters “where’s my African American” as if to show he had support of African Americans.

On January 27, 2017, just seven days after being sworn in as President, January Donald Trump signed an executive order halting all refugee admissions and temporarily barring people from seven Muslim-majority countries arguing it was needed to combat terrorism. The move sparked numerous protests and legal challenges.

In August 2017, after a 20-year-old white man drove his car into a crowd at a white nationalist rally in Charlotesville, Virginia, killing one anti-racist protester and injuring 19 others, President Trump said that there was “blame on both sides” regarding the deadly violence that was instigated by white supremacists.

President Trump during a ceremony in the White House to honor the World War II Navajo Code talkers, one from New Mexico, took the opportunity to call Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren “Pocahontas”.

During the football season, Trump proclaimed that professional football players, who were predominantly African American and who “took a knee” during the national anthem to protest the treatment of African Americans should be fired.

The New York Times reported in December, 2017 that President Trump said in a June meeting about immigration that Haitians “all have AIDS”, a statement denied by the White House.

On December 24, 2017, The New York Times reported that President Donald Trump described Nigerians as people living in huts and that they would not want to return to them. He reportedly told members of congress that African countries where “shit hole” countries and said 40,000 had come from Nigeria and would never “go back to their huts” once they had seen America.

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

WHAT ARE WE FAILING TO HEAR?

Sixty-seven years later, we are still asking “What is it that America has failed to hear?” The words of Dr. King have been proven true once again with the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis Police Officer and the protests that have ensued across the country.

We must finally do something about ending racism once and for all for ourselves and for the sake of our future generations. As individuals, we must, in some manner, make it very clear to all who we interact with, our families and friends alike, and people we work with that racism is not tolerated on any level and it must be condemned in no uncertain terms.

Our law enforcement community must understand with complete clarity that police brutality, excessive use of force and deadly force based on racial profiling and the presumption of guilt because of a person’s color and not evidence will not be tolerated. No Hispanic, no African American and no person of color should ever feel uncomfortable talking to any police officer or feel they cannot call the police to ask for help or to report a crime. Police must recognize that performing their motto to “serve and protect” is not determined by skin color.

Out of crisis and chaos can come opportunity. Once again, we have an opportunity to look within ourselves and acknowledge the racism in this country is very real, very pervasive and tearing our communities and our country apart. We must look within ourselves and our communities and finally do something about it to end racism once and for all. As citizens of a free country, we must seize this opportunity and reach out to all communities of color more than ever before and work together to end racism in this country and for our future generations. As individuals, we must, in some manner, make it very clear to all who we interact with at work and in our daily lives, our families and friends alike, that racism is not and will not be tolerated on any level and it must be condemned in no uncertain terms.

WHO TRUMP IS REFLECTS RACISM IN AMERICA

Trump has made it clear he is interested only in a “law and order” approach to the protests over the murder of George Floyd. His answer is to militarize the response to the protests that will inflame his base and that has resulted in violence and chaos in the streets. Trump could care less about the underlying issues of racism and police brutality that have sparked the protests. Trump is deaf and blind when it comes to racial injustice, and will never hear, much less understand it.

President Trump promotes hostility, mistrust and violence. He seems to thrives on it and enjoy it. Trump promoted violence when running for President, he has done it at his rallies and he is doing it again after the killing of George Floyd. He repeatedly uses harsh rhetoric to trash journalists and political opponents during campaign rallies creating and inflaming an extremely divisive political environment of hostility, mistrust and violence.

Trump blames the media for the “anger” in this country, refusing to take any responsibility for it himself. What Trump does best is to stoke violence which is what makes him so dangerous. His cult like right-wing extremists’ supporters respond favorably to all he does raising fears that they may act amid the violence and tension surrounding public health closures, amid the ongoing global pandemic and now the protests over the killing of George Floyd.

Just when you think things cannot get any worse, Trump makes it worse stoking violence. Trump has decided to start a real war, a civil war, with American citizens to deal with the civil unrest by declaring himself “Your President of law and order” and demanding National Guards be activated to quell the protesters. Extremists are more than happy to participate in violent civil disorder and to watch as the country is burned to the ground. Trump has confirmed he is totally unfit, incompetent and totally unprepared to be President by ordering the military to deal with the protests over the killing of George Floyd.

America hears loud and clear that Trump stands for racism and hate that can no longer be tolerated in the White House. Come November 3, we must all let him hear loud and clear he is not fit to be our President.