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Police Detain Brooklyn Councilman at West Indian Parade
By FERNANDA SANTOS and MICHAEL WILSON
Published:
September 5, 2011
A city councilman from
Brooklyn was handcuffed and briefly detained by the police on Monday afternoon
during the West Indian Day Parade after an argument with officers over whether
he was allowed to use a closed sidewalk, said Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, whose aide was also detained in the dispute. The councilman, Jumaane D. Williams, was not charged with a crime, nor was the aide, Kirsten John Foy, Mr. De Blasio’s community affairs director. The annual parade, which celebrates the culture of the Caribbean islands with feathered costumes and music and attracts tens of thousands of spectators, is a high-turnout event for the police as they seek to ward off trouble. On Monday, officers responded to at least two shootings at the parade, in which two men were wounded.
In the episode involving
Mr. Williams and Mr. Foy, witnesses questioned whether the race of the two men —
both are black — played a role.
The police said that before
their identities had been established, Mr. Williams and Mr. Foy were prevented
from entering an area near the Brooklyn Museum that had been blocked by
officers. “A crowd formed and an unknown individual punched a police captain on the scene,” said Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman.
To separate them from the
crowd, Mr. Browne said, Mr. Williams and Mr. Foy, who were handcuffed, “were
brought across the street and detained there until their identities were
established, and then released.” The police said that the two men had not been
arrested.
Mr. Browne said Police
Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly had met with Mr. Williams and Mr. Foy “and directed
that an investigation into the matter be conducted.”
Mr. de Blasio said he had
barely arrived home in Park Slope after marching in the parade when he got a
call informing him of the episode.
Mr. Williams and Mr. Foy
were trying to walk from Grand Army Plaza to a post-parade event at the
Brooklyn Museum, using a sidewalk that the police had blocked. According to Mr.
de Blasio, who said he had spoken to Mr. Foy about the episode, they had been
given permission to use the sidewalk by a police officer wearing the kind of
white shirt usually worn by an officer of high rank.
But as the two men
continued walking down the sidewalk, they found themselves surrounded by
uniformed police officers stationed farther along.
“Jumaane was wearing a
council member’s pin, they were trying to explain who they were, but the
officers weren’t listening,” Mr. de Blasio said in an interview.
Mr. de Blasio said that
Mr. Williams began to argue with the officers and that at some point he and Mr.
Foy were both thrown to the ground and handcuffed. They were taken to the Union Temple, a synagogue on Eastern Parkway, where Mr. de Blasio
said he went after getting the call. There, Mr. de Blasio said, he spoke to a
police commander, who released Mr. Williams and Mr. Foy after about 30 minutes
without filing charges.
“It’s broad daylight, they
get thrown to the ground, they both get arrested,” Mr. de Blasio said. “If that’s
what happens to an elected official and a senior appointee, imagine what happens
to a general member of the public.”
Mr. Williams did not
answer requests for comment. His spokesman, Stefan Ringel, said the councilman
would address the case on Tuesday, at a news conference on the steps of City
Hall.
A spokesman for Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg, Stu Loeser, said that the mayor spoke with Mr. Williams
after the episode and that a deputy mayor spoke with Mr. de Blasio. “As the
Police Department has indicated, they are investigating this incident and will
take all appropriate steps once it is concluded,” Mr. Loeser said.
The confrontation happened
within sight of many paradegoers and not far from the entrance to the Brooklyn
Museum, where elected officials and dignitaries were gathered. One of them, Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries, arrived there moments after the confrontation and
quickly issued a statement calling the actions of the police “unjustified” and
urging the mayor and Mr. Kelly to apologize. The case, Mr. Jeffries said, “is
further evidence of the siege mentality the N.Y.P.D. has unleashed against black men in New York City.”
He said the officers involved should be “strongly disciplined.”
Mr. Williams won a Council
seat in 2009 after working as a community organizer. He represents East
Flatbush, Flatbush, Flatlands and parts of Canarsie and Midwood. He has been an
outspoken critic of the Police Department’s “stop, question and frisk” policy.
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