If He’d Just Obeyed the Police Officer

The usual suspects are trying to claim Henry Louis Gates is at fault for not obeying the police in his arrest from his own home:

 

I’m saying ‘You need to send someone to fix my lock.’ All of a sudden, there was a policeman on my porch. And I thought, ‘This is strange.’ So I went over to the front porch still holding the phone, and I said ‘Officer, can I help you?’ And he said, ‘Would you step outside onto the porch.’ And the way he said it, I knew he wasn’t canvassing for the police benevolent association. All the hairs stood up on the back of my neck, and I realized that I was in danger. And I said to him no, out of instinct. I said, ‘No, I will not.’

My lawyers later told me that that was a good move and had I walked out onto the porch he could have arrested me for breaking and entering. He said ‘I’m here to investigate a 911 call for breaking and entering into this house.’ And I said ‘That’s ridiculous because this happens to be my house. And I’m a Harvard professor.’ He says ‘Can you prove that you’re a Harvard professor?’ I said yes, I turned and closed the front door to the kitchen where I’d left my wallet, and I got out my Harvard ID and my Massachusetts driver’s license which includes my address and I handed them to him. And he’s sitting there looking at them.

Now it’s clear that he had a narrative in his head: A black man was inside someone’s house, probably a white person’s house, and this black man had broken and entered, and this black man was me.

So he’s looking at my ID, he asked me another question, which I refused to answer. And I said I want your name and your badge number because I want to file a complaint because of the way he had treated me at the front door. He didn’t say, ‘Excuse me, sir, is there a disturbance here, is this your house?’—he demanded that I step out on the porch, and I don’t think he would have done that if I was a white person.

But at that point, I realized that I was in danger. And so I said to him that I want your name, and I want your badge number and I said it repeatedly.

 

HLG: The police report says I was engaged in loud and tumultuous behavior. That’s a joke. Because I have a severe bronchial infection which I contracted in China and for which I was treated and have a doctor’s report from the Peninsula hotel in Beijing. So I couldn’t have yelled. I can’t yell even today, I’m not fully cured.

It escalated as follows: I kept saying to him, ‘What is your name, and what is your badge number?’ and he refused to respond. I asked him three times, and he refused to respond. And then I said, ‘You’re not responding because I’m a black man, and you’re a white officer.’ That’s what I said. He didn’t say anything. He turned his back to me and turned back to the porch. And I followed him. I kept saying, “I want your name, and I want your badge number.”

It looked like an ocean of police had gathered on my front porch. There were probably half a dozen police officers at this point. The mistake I made was I stepped onto the front porch and asked one of his colleagues for his name and badge number. And when I did, the same officer said, ‘Thank you for accommodating our request. You are under arrest.’ And he handcuffed me right there. It was outrageous. My hands were behind my back I said, ‘I’m handicapped. I walk with a cane. I can’t walk to the squad car like this.’ There was a huddle among the officers; there was a black man among them. They removed the cuffs from the back and put them around the front.

A crowd had gathered, and as they were handcuffing me and walking me out to the car, I said, ‘Is this how you treat a black man in America?’

 

I believe the crime is known as being an uppity black man.  Jeebus, you prove you identity and your residency and they still arrest you for essentially not being defferential to the police in your own home.

0 thoughts on “If He’d Just Obeyed the Police Officer”
  1. I have a feeling those cops were equal opportunity world class a**holes.

    Think of the Berwyn Hts, MD who sued his own county’s police force after a no knock SWAT raid ended in the death of his two dogs and property damage. Even when they knew they had it wrong they tried to cya by charging him…

    Of course telling the police officers “Do you know who I am?” which I heard happened here is just begging for trouble. I think it was Micky Kaus who brought that up. If true… that kind of looks bad for the good professor.

  2. You may well be correct–I’m more disturbed by the notion that the officer acted properly. Even if Gates was a jackass, he was a jackass in his own home.

    I am quite often a jackass in my own home.

  3. Henry Louis Gates and Mr obama are both accurate to be aggravated by this UNLAWFUL ARREST.

    American police force (all over) is well known in the whole world to be a bunch of drug pushing corrupted red necks.

    Mr Osama’s pre election promise was to weed out these intolerant dim-wits.

    The police officer involved should stay in America; he would have been in a big trouble in some other parts of the world. A rope around his thick red neck.

    America has military personnel all over the world promoting DEMOCRACY. What a JOKE.

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