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City loses good leader in McManus
BY DWIGHT HOBBES
Minneapolis Mayor R. T. Rybak and the City Council
didn’t miss their water until folk in San Antonio started
nosing around the well. Then hizzoner and company scrambled like
cats scratching for traction on a glass floor. Too late. Minneapolis
Police Department Chief William McManus had applied for and accepted
the job as San Antonio’s Chief of Police and was now in the
wind. Now, there is plenty enough egg to go around on the faces
of Rybak and the council.
McManus was wooed and ushered in as, literally,
the great white hope: a top-cop willing and able to confront and
counteract the institutionalized racism that long has characterized
American police forces. Quickly, it grew clear that community leaders
of color were, if not unconditionally in love with McManus, a lot
happier than they had been with his predecessor, Robert Olson, who
turned a blind eye to racial profiling and police brutality as well
as a deaf ear to mounting complaints about both. And not a minute
too soon. Minneapolis minorities had raised so much hell about discrimination
that federal mediation and the Police Community Relations Council
were mandated to avoid the government stepping in and taking the
MPD over.
When McManus walked in the door taking direct
charge, putting in check those white officers suspected of wrongdoing,
promoting cops of color (including Lt. Michael Davis, head of Internal
Affairs Division), it all suddenly got too real for Mayor Rybak,
who couldn’t look good to voters of color, not to mention
white folk of conscience, and kiss the police union’s behind
all at the same time. He stood behind McManus with all the staunch
support of a second-guessing milquetoast. And took his sweet time
about offering the man a new contract.
So, now, San Antonio has a brand new chief of
police and Minneapolis has assistant chief Tim Dolan installed as
interim head cop, a plug hustled up to stick in a badly-leaking
dam.
“It’s the city’s loss,”
says Jayne Khalifa, executive director of the Department of Civil
Rights. “Chief was able to do something in a very short period
of time that many police chiefs have not been able to do. And that
was, first of all, to win the support of residents.” With
Natalie Johnson Lee gone from the Council and community liaison
Kinshasha Kambui gone from Rybak’s staff, Khalifa quite arguably
is the lone person of color with any integrity holding a politically
significant job downtown. She notes, “One of the areas where
the police department has been most highly criticized has been the
vitriolic relations [it has] had with the communities. He was certainly
able to bridge that gap.” Khalifa adds, “If it’s
unclear whether you’re going to have a job, it would be in
your best interest to look for another job. [No one should be] surprised
that he began to pursue other options, when it was not clear what
his longevity was going to be in the City of Minneapolis.”
She sums up, “A lot of community people are going to be very
disappointed, because one of [McManus’] real strengths was
being able to connect with and communicate with the community. The
chief was good for the City and the City is going to have difficulty
replacing a person that has [his] kind of credibility … [which]
was not necessarily valued in the police department.”
Michelle Gross, who heads up the watchdog outfit Communities United
Against Police Brutality, doesn’t give McManus a straight
A, but acknowledges, “He attempted to diversify the police
force and [did] so in the area of police leadership.” Her
complaint? “[The chief] has not fulfilled the promise he made
to hold brutal police accountable. In part, this is because he never
had the full backing of the city council and the mayor. I also believe
it was a lack of will on his part. After the Duy Ngo incident, he
found it easier to just go along with the police federation.”
She’s talking about the Asian, plain- clothes cop who was
gunned down by his brothers in blue who saw skin color first and
never bothered to ask questions, resulting in political white-washing
that has yet to hold anyone on the force definitely accountable.”
Gross goes on to assert, “[McManus failed to really move forward
in diversifying the force, though I don’t hold him responsible
for this, since he was undermined in his efforts by the mayor. And
because it would have taken longer than two years to accomplish
this goal.” She is most disappointed in the chief’s
“actions to undermine the Civilian Review Authority. In nearly
every sustained CRA case, McManus refused to discipline the officers
involved. This sends a strong—and very damaging—message
to the rank-and-file that police misconduct is acceptable to police
leadership. This will be the legacy the community will have to recover
from.”
When the word got out that McManus was serious
about saving his ass by jumping ship, instead of twisting in the
wind until someone, somehow decided to have his back, Rybak and
the council called a virtual state of emergency to try and keep
him. Damn fools. Typical of this cosmetic metropolis, they brought
in strong talent, jerked him around, then couldn’t understand
why he wasn’t goin’ for the okey-doke. There’s
no denying that Gross has some good points. Still, anyway you slice
it, Mayor R. T. Rybak and the City Council messed up. Big time.
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