Share

Sometimes Even When You're Right, You're Wrong

by: Dr. Wilmer J. Leon III, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

photo
Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Photo: Michele Asselin)

    On Thursday July 16, 2009, after returning from a trip to China, Harvard University scholar Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. had difficulty opening the front door of the home he leases from Harvard. After he and his driver struggled with the front door, Dr. Gates gained entry through the back door of the home, shut off the alarm, opened the front door and the driver left.

    According to Cambridge Police Department incident report #9005127, a neighbor called the police and reported a possible breaking and entering at the residence. The woman "... observed what appeared to be two black males with backpacks on the porch ..." Her suspicions were aroused when "... she observed one of the men wedging his shoulder into the door as if he was trying to force entry." The uniformed police officer went to the front door, saw Dr. Gates standing in the foyer and asked him to step out onto the porch. Dr. Gates refused.

    According to the incident report, after identifying himself as Sergeant Crowly and explaining that he was "investigating a report of a break-in in progress" at the residence, Dr. Gates opened the front door and asked, "Why, because I'm a black man in America?" After supplying the officer with Harvard University identification, the officer radioed for Harvard University Police.

    One thing that is not discernible from the incident report is the demeanor of Sergeant Crowly. All too often, police officers introduce "attitude" into a situation with an aggressive or condescending tenor and tone that can quickly escalate an already naturally tense situation. When the element of race is injected into the equation, all too often a simple traffic stop or investigation by the police can escalate into confrontation. It has not been indicated by any of the reported statements made by Dr. Gates's attorney, Charles Ogletree, that Sergeant Crowly injected any "attitude" into the situation.

    This gets to right to the heart of my point. As an African-American male, I have always been taught to show respect to the police, even when or if I feel that the officer is wrong. As a survival technique, I am teaching this to my son and I convey this to my students and all of the other young people that I engage in my lectures. My parents and other elders have always taught me "an argument with a cop is an argument you will always lose ... if you don't get along with the police, you will probably go along with the police and that's a trip you do not want to take. Even when you're right, if you fail to comply, you're wrong. You're objective during an encounter with the police is to leave that encounter in the same manner in which you entered it, in one piece. You can challenge the officer later in court. That's 'Black Man - 101.'"

    Instead of simply and calmly complying with the officers request, showing proof that he lived at the residence and thanking the officer for protecting the neighborhood, Dr. Gates decided to follow the police officer outside and berate him in front of a gathering group of people. According to the report, "As I descended the stairs to the sidewalk, Gates continued to yell at me, accusing me of racial bias and continued to tell me that I had not heard the last of him."

    Even after the officer warned Dr. Gates that he was becoming disorderly, according to the officer, Dr. Gates continued to yell. "Gates ignored my warning and continued to yell, which drew the attention of both the police offices and citizens, who appeared surprised and alarmed by Gate's outbursts ... It was at this time that I informed Gates that he was under arrest." Once Dr. Gates embarrassed Sergeant Crowley, in Sergeant Crowley's eyes, he was left with few options. Sergeant Crowly may not have been right, but that was real!

    If Dr. Gates ignored the warning and continued to yell, there are very few police officers that would allow themselves to be humiliated in front of their co-workers and the public. The police operate from legal as well as perceived authority. Once the perception of authority is challenged, in their minds, they have difficulty being effective.

    With the number of people who had gathered at the scene, it should be fairly easy to determine who is telling the truth. I am sure that this will all come out in court or through another fact-finding process.

    Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. is a 58-year-old African-American male. He is the director of Harvard's W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African-American Research. As a Harvard University professor, he failed "Black Man - 101" don't argue with the police unless you want a beating and to go to jail! Has he not seen the arrest data? Has he not seen the incarceration data? Has he failed to learn the lessons from his elders that I have learned from mine?

    Some of Dr. Gates's African-American colleagues are saying that this is part of a pattern of racial profiling in Cambridge. Some believe that the arrest would not have happened if Professor Gates were white. These points may very well be true, and we all wish for and are working towards the day when racial profiling is no longer a reality in America.

    In 2009, in Cambridge and in most other towns in America, even with his Ph.D., Henry Louis Gates Jr. is still an African-American male in America. The lesson to be learned from this: If you don't get along with the police, you will probably go along with the police and that's a trip you do not want to take. Even when you're right, if you fail to comply, you're wrong. Is this fair? No, but it's real!

  

»


Dr. Wilmer Leon is the producer/host of the nationally broadcast call-in talk radio program "On With Leon" and a Teaching Associate in the Department of Political Science at Howard University in Washington, DC. Go to www.wilmerleon.com or email wjl3us@yahoo.com.

Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

Just yesterday I read a

Just yesterday I read a story in the Ann Arbor news where the police were called to a home where a neighbor suspected a break in. When the police arrived, there were two men in the home. One man was laying in an upstairs bed with the blankets over him. Both men claimed that they lived in the home. As it turned out, the owner of the home was a woman who was not at home at the time. The men were from another city and did not know the owner. They were, in fact, robbing the home. These things happen. It is unfortunate that this situation got somewhat out of control, but I think people are reading too much of their own bias into this situation. Personally, I know who Dr. Gates is because I own a very good reference book edited by him. Until yesterday, I doubt that I could find a single neighbor on my street who would know him. I think your article is very perceptive, but I would like to add that class divisions come into play in these situations also. Dr. Gates was asserting himself as a Harvard Professor - essentially one of the elite. The officer is most likely what one would consider to be one of the working class. Class division can be the cause of resentment too. I once saw such an incident between a medical doctor (white) and an officer (also white). When the doctor started yelling, the officer threw the doctor to the ground.

There is an excellent video

There is an excellent video which I believe was produced by the ACLU about how to avoid having to "go along" with the police. One example of how NOT to handle the situation was based on three young people driving to a rock concert with a small amount of pot in a backpack. Perhaps someone can post a link to it here. Although I agree with the author of this article, I'n not sure of what to think about Prof Gates' reaction. On one hand, the incident is a far cry from what would have happened to him in the past. On the other hand, his reaction seems to indicate that the emotional scars are still there.

Older White Woman 101 is the

Older White Woman 101 is the same. If you challenge someone with a gun, a stun device, a bat, and cuffs, you are going down no matter who you are. It's only a question of whether you are going to live or die or how hurt you are going to get. You may get some taxpayer money later, if you live to tell, but you will be inconvenienced in the meantime. The comment before me kind of beat me to it. We were joking about profiling at a continuing-education exercise class over the weekend, because most of the instructors are women, with only a few men (they're tough, they can take it). But in my town, but I am pretty sure the statistics are equal opportunity. Police have killed people of all races, ages, etc. I met Dr. Gates on the street in Boston, once. Stunned, I just said, "I know you." He was so gracious. He asked what town I was from and said he really likes the huge bookstore there. I am sorry he has had this experience, but customer service is under-trained in our police departments. Less verbally adept people get killed all the time. If you are visibly upset, you are really at risk, no matter how high the pay-offs for wrongful death have been in the past. Keeping your voice in a low tone and low volume gives you a better chance of not getting hurt or inconvenienced. We should all be yogis, but this is the USA. Maybe it would be worse if it were France, except their police are more used to angry people, from what I hear on truthout.

I fully understand the way

I fully understand the way black people are often treated by the police. In my city, St.Paul,Mn, many young black men my daughter's age will not attend parties in Minneapolis where the police often pull them over just for being there. The same is true for some of my students who are gay. But in this case I have no sympathy for Dr.Gates. The police were there to PROTECT his home. If a neighbor saw two men forcing a door, there was good reason to suspect a robbery. He had been away from his home for an extended period. Instead of being pleased that his neighbors were keeping an eye on his house, and that the police responded, he responded with sarcasm and then leveled accusations of racism. I don't think he was behaving in either a ratioal or professional manner. The young StPaul kids who answer respectfuly even when they are being singled out, show much more intelligence than the professor. If we see racism everywhere, we will never see it where it really exists; in the racist,classist structure that we are rrying to break down in this country.

Although I tend to generally

Although I tend to generally agree with Dr. Leon's direction in this article, and I am not necessarily a fan of Gates (although I admire his energy). But I see that this short article ignores that Dr. Gates repeatedly asked the officer for his badge number, and that he was also humiliated by the officer in his own home. Some of the details of the story should be straighten out and confirmed before passing a judgment on Gates to have failed the 'Black Man - 101.' Moreover, trying to put the burden on the victim, as if failing for not being condescending enough, is like approving the continuation of a system that is not only unfair to Black males, but to Latinos and women in general. Asking that Gates should have just been nice (which is a polite thing to do, but should not featured in issues of justice), is simply giving into injustice. What should we do in this case? First, find out all the details. And if Gates' version stands out to scrutiny, we should forcedly emphasize that at the moment when the officer was presented with the IDs, he should have left the premises without conditions.

Lets get this straight. A

Lets get this straight. A neighbor called the police and said "two black men" were forcing their way into a house. The police arrive and knock, Mr. Gates refuses to open the door. Finally he comes out looking black, (kind of fitting the description of the caller), and begins to give the police a hard time. (still looking black and fitting the description of the caller). Then things sort of get straightened out when he identifies himself as the owner, but he continues to berate the responding officer who was actually trying to protect Mr. Gates home. The officer was doing his job based on the information he was given. Mr. Gates was refusing to comply with an order from the policeman and to give information and telling the policeman he was being harassed because he was black, (still fitting the description of the caller). This was not a case of DWB, (driving while black). This was a man in a house fitting the description given by a neighbor who was concerned for Mr. Gates property. Mr. Gates owes the policeman an apology. I have to believe that most of your responses if you print them or not are not in favor of Mr. Gates. And these from progressive readers of a progressive website.

I appreciate that cool, calm

I appreciate that cool, calm behavior when interacting with the police is essential to "Black Man 101." I would just like to add that this is, in fact, essential to "American Citizen 101." You simply must follow this protocol - be polite, accommodate an officer's request for ID, keep your mouth shut and answer their questions with simple, brief answers that are to-the-point. It doesn't matter if you believe you are in the right, or that you feel your rights are being violated. A cop will engage an escalation each and every time, especially if they perceive that you are disrespecting them. Take badge numbers, remember details, and submit a formal complaint after the fact if you must. But do not ever EVER argue with the cops. Don't threaten them, don't insult them, don't even do anything that could be interpreted as an insult or threat. Someone with extensive knowledge of black people's historical interactions with the authorities -- should KNOW this.

Despite the fact that we

Despite the fact that we have a Black President things still have not changed as much as we think. There is still discrimination everywhere in our society. One thing I have noticed as a university faculty member is that when a minority male speaks up for themselves they are always described as "angry" or "aggressive". When a white male speaks up in the same way he is described as "strong" or "powerful." There is every reason for Dr. Gates to speak confidently and to refuse the requests of an officer without a warrant when he is in his own home. The final issue is the arrogance of the police. As stated above they are often working class and uneducated, but they are given special status, which many of them do not deserve. Simply refusing to talk to them is not a crime, nor is telling them to mind their own business. The most amusing thing is when unfamiliar police officers encounter one another outside of uniform. They carry the same attitude and quickly escalate with one another. this happened in LA a few years ago, when an off duty Black police detective was shot by a white off duty officer over a traffic incident. We will probably have reached true equality when the Black officer can shoot the white one, something that has never happened to my knowledge.

I think Dr. Gates is still

I think Dr. Gates is still teaching us lessons on race relations. Okay so maybe he didn't handle the situation so well. I think he probably was shocked. After all, he is used to earning and receiving respect. You call him an elite; I call him someone who worked hard, followed the rules, and is a role model for others, black, white, brown, or any other color. Okay so maybe everyone needs to "Yes sir, no sir" to the police, go along to get along. I understand that police need to maintain the perception of authority, but in so many cases they are wrong, they use too much force, and they are allowed to be bullies. Maybe that wasn't the case in Cambridge. Maybe the lady really thought she was calling 911 to report a crime in progress. Maybe some white people just can't believe some Black people would/could/should live in certain neighborhoods. This whole unfortunate series of events just is a wake-up call that race is still a big issue in America, even though we have a Black man as President, we still have a long way to go for equality.

I think when Gates showed

I think when Gates showed his ID and when that didn't squash it immediately. He got pissed, plain and simple, tired from traveling and stressed because he couldn't get in the door, now the police are threatening to take him to jail while standing in his house. That would piss me off too. The police weren't protecting Gates or his possessions. They were protecting Harvard property Gates was living in. I know Black man 101, A'ced the course..."yes officer, no officer, not a problem officer, I'm a harmless AA male officer..." But sometimes you get caught off guard, like humans tend to be, and you get pissed. Not long ago there was the story of the football player pulled over at the hospital trying to see his Mother in law before she passed away and was harassed by the police as he tried to explain the situation. Police aren't interested in hearing anything Black people say to them. Obama himself would have a problem too if he was jogging by at the wrong time police are looking for a black male. Think I'm lying...? Cause you know there will be a policeman that doesn't recognize him. "Officer, I'm the president!" "sure you are buddy and I'm the Pope, put your hands against the wall and spread em, you getting smart with me boy?". That's exactly how it would go.

About 2 months ago I walked

About 2 months ago I walked to the market 3/4 of a mile from my house. I use a back pack to carry things home. On the way home, about a block from my house a police car pulls up along side me and the driver tells me to stop and put my hands on my head and turn my back to them. I do. Two policemen exit the car and ask me where I was going and where I'd been. I explain. The then ask me if they can search me and my backpack. I say yes, of course and I calmly ask why. They tell me that a man with a gun had threatened someone in the neighborhood and that he had the same color pants as I did. By this time two other police cars arrive, the police exit the cars and have their hands on their guns. Now there are five policemen and one police women watching me being searched. I told them I lived a block away and have ID in my wallet. They don't ask for it. After not finding a gun, and seeing the groceries in my backpack the say they're sorry for stopping me and hope that I understand. I say thank you for stopping me and keeping an eye on the neighborhood. Now the moral is, this could have gotten real ugly if I'd copped an attitude. Oh, I'm white.

When, I read the news of Dr.

When, I read the news of Dr. Gates, I hoped it was untrue that he reacted as the police said in their report. I always say yes officer, remain in a calm voice and take my traffic ticket politely from the officer. Please, do not inject race in the conversation with the police that is for a courtroom. I do not wish to be taken by the police many accidents have happen to African Americans between their arrest and their arrival at booking. I'm an African American Woman and I still practice this type of behavior.

I am curious as to what Dr.

I am curious as to what Dr. Gates would have said had he learned that his home had been robbed and the police had been notified while the crime was in progress and had done nothing? It seems that in this case, the officers involved were put into a no-win situation. Regardless of skin color or ethnic background, all parties involved deserved to be treated with respect. I wonder if this could have been resolved without press and news involvement had the Golden Rule been followed.

One thing to remember.

One thing to remember. police race relations have not improved with time. There was a period when police departments offered training to deal with and ratchet down culturally sensitive or emotional situations. I guess nowadays it is felt that it's no longer needed. What is truly unfortunate is that these and similar episodes are still common occurrences in the United States.

Part of this is an issue

Part of this is an issue about police, In the USA police are poorly paid (and trained) in the UK and NZ police are a professional force with good pay and conditions. This does not fix this problem completely Citizen 101 still applies but it does go a long way towards helping the situation

Stanley Milgram concluded

Stanley Milgram concluded from his experiments that people who harm others dislike and blame the victim. There can hardly be a cop who doesn't know from observation if not active participation that many members of the public (not just Rodney King) are routinely abused. That means that they are out there in the community in a "defensive" state of mind. We need some sort of reconciliation work to establish that we are all in the same boat. I live in the UK and was talking to a WPC (Woman Police Constable) about how corrupt the government was. The PC with her stood back with folded arms until I said that police have mortgages too. Those of us who are not among the entitled need to unite in common cause, coppers and deputies included.

"As stated above they are

"As stated above they are often working class and uneducated, but they are given special status, which many of them do not deserve." What? Nobody said that in any comment. Being working class does not mean being uneducated. Being called working class is not an insult, it is a compliment. The writer is also no doubt working class but doesn't know it. The only other choice, despite the myriad gradations of the working class, would be ruling class, and no amount of education can make a person ruling class; that is by birth or invitation only. Someone else referred to "injustice." There was no injustice here. Arrests are procedural. The question of justice or injustice arises in the court room, not on the front porch, in a situation such as this. Nobody's rights were violated - there was no damage to life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness, only an inconvenience while the facts were being sorted out.

Amadou Diallo was shot 41

Amadou Diallo was shot 41 times by New York's finest attempting to enter his house.

I think that the Cambridge

I think that the Cambridge police officer was clearly in the wrong and needs to apologize. I would have been extremely angry if it had happened to me. I also use a cane and if I had been handcuffed on my own property, booked, and had a mug shot, I would be clearly mad. No ifs, ands, or buts. Just because you are a police officer with a gun, it does not give you a right to make a person come out of their own house without a warrant and then not even identify yourself. Gates was treated wrong. I don't care about "Black 101", it is time that people stop letting the police take advantage of the situation because they have a gun and arresting people without cause, tazzing people and shotting people without cause.

Exactly now, what does the

Exactly now, what does the image of Dr. Gates, who I imagine was dressed neatly and cleanly, and "two black males with backpacks" have in common? One important piece of information left out in this piece is: was Dr. Gates wearing or did he possess a backpack? If I was a police officer and found a different scene than what was called in on the radio, I would have questioned the authenticity of the caller's description and entered into a live conversation with Dr. Gates. The officer had poor judgement in not reassessing information in the "light of day" where Dr. Gates could have been questioned openly and easily. He could have been calmly asked: please show me your ID and, SIR, do you live here? The officer could have then called in the supplied information and received verification about Dr. Gates' identity. But - American police are more like rattlesnakes than humans, so the scene that ensued was not surprising, given the current state of psychological affairs in this country. "Amazing" how many people supported the police's perspective and viewpoint and actions in this forum.

15:56 and 16:02 above are

15:56 and 16:02 above are interesting and correct. One point hasn't been mentioned. What about the busybody who called the police? If she was so nosy, did she not know that a black faculty member lived there? Without her babble, the situation might not have happened.

What kind of ´concerned

What kind of ´concerned neighbor´ does not even RECOGNIZE their own neighbor this close> This is extreme prejudice.

This is a true story. I have

This is a true story. I have no record but many run in's with Police, particularly when younger, I have a little problem with authority. I'm sure if I was Black that record statement would not be true. I don't know why I haven't told this lately, used to all the time, it's entertaining since I survived. I was a walkin home one night in January, I had been out drinking but not driving. It was a very cold night and there was ice everywhere. As a result I was thinking only of my warm bed and looking at the sidewalk while moving slowly to make sure I didn't slip. I heard a screech and a car stopped six inches from my legs. I look up, it's cops and both are jumping out with Glocks at my chest. I throw up my arms and yell "HEY HEY HEY, STOP!" They're cops, they follow orders, and they did. This turned into a 5 minute (Seemed like a lifetime) exchange with us in verbal confrontation with guns at my chest but me dominating dialogue (As in, quit pointing your #@!&^% guns at my chest idiots, want to shoot me by accident?). I can't get into that here, is a book. They were after a convenience store robber I resembled (5' 10", 185, light brown hair,white male... I said yeah, me and 100,000 other dudes in this city, really), I convinced them I was not. They ultimately withdrew their guns, let me put my hands down, apologized and asked me not to report, asked a couple more questions and let me continue home WITHOUT EVEN IDing ME! What if I was a good con man? Heaven forbid, what if I had been Black? I think they would've been tougher, maybe ya think?

With all due respect, Mr.

With all due respect, Mr. Leon, I think the point about the Gates affair is his arrogance, not his skin color. he acted like because he was a member of the Harvard faculty he was above the law.

If officer Crowley

If officer Crowley recognized prof. Gates,cane, limp, race, etc., what was of the purpose of insisting that he show his ID?

In the potential commission

In the potential commission of a crime, does the authority of the police at the scene (investigating) "warrant" demanding the homeowner step outside their home and provide identification? I mean, isn't the precept that the police DO have that authority... particularly when faced with a potential crime? While societal status, attitude, level of education, race, personal experience and fear are all important factors in this incident... weren't they all brought into play after the initial face to face between Dr. Gates and Sergeant Crowly? Why isn't that beginning step more dispassionate, but cooperative?

I think this is more about

I think this is more about rogue cops than it is race. I'm white and have had several run ins with arrogant cops over the years for no logical reason other than pure power play; once in a park with my dogs who were heeled but off their leashes when there was not a single other person or dog in the park, and once when my car broke down on the freeway and a patrolman pulled over, pulled his gun on me, made me put my hands behind my head and put me on the ground BEFORE he asked any questions at all. My brother was an arrogant cop who loved the "n****r" beat, as he called it, so he could club them with his night stick if they got out of line so I also know it's about race, as well, but if cops can't take the heat of someone talking back to them they need to find other work, period. On a brighter note, my brother got his ass busted for seducing women around the state when he worked as a narc (they filed law suits against him). He and his wife are both fundie Christians so he pulled a Jimmy Swaggart, she forgave him and they lived happily ever after. It never ends but at least he's out of the police force for good.

Of course, now we know that

Of course, now we know that initial call did not say "two black men with backpacks." Color was not mentioned at all, and she did say "suitcases." So, where did the "black men with backpacks" come from, if not from the arresting officer? He deliberately lured Skip Gates out of his house so that he could charge him with a crime, to punish him for being angry. To everyone who says, over and over, "be nice to the police, be polite, call them sir, don't move, don't raise your voice, be meek..." - when did we get so used to being afraid of the police? When did we become accustomed to the belief that a police officer will use their power to punish you, even when you haven't done anything wrong, and the answer is to try to whimper your way out, to show deference.

OK, all you

OK, all you pretend-reasonable types: are we - the citizens who pay for police with our taxes - supposed to fill out our calm, useless complaint forms before or after America becomes a Nazi-like police state? Not that either filing will have any effect.

This event is much more

This event is much more significant than we seem willing to admit. First, the news coverage has revealed how unfamiliar even liberal-leaning journalists are with the leaders revered by the African-American community. (Perhaps mainstream reporters should spend more time watching PBS.) Next, it's been disheartening to discover that a majority of citizens polled felt comfortable with the idea of a fellow countryman being arrested for copping an attitude with a policeman who had entered his home. (Friday's Happy Hour scenario notwithstanding, someone is going to have to explain to me the meaning of civil liberties.) Finally, and possibly most disturbing of all, am I wrong to be concerned that Professor Gates's emeritus status has made him a less sympathetic figure than a working-class policeman? The idea that black men should be prepared for police encounters may be valid, but is inherently antebellum.