WBZ.com
Listen Live Now!
Top Stories
Barack Obama
President Barack Obama walks to the White House after stepping off Marine One in Washington Wednesday, July 29, 2009.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Posted: Thursday, 30 July 2009 3:36PM

Obama's 'beer summit' with policeman, professor





Cambridge (AP/WBZ Newsroom)  -- President Barack Obama once again hit the pause button on Thursday in his drive to overhaul health care to revisit the racially charged issue that stole the spotlight from his top legislative priority - the arrest of his Harvard professor friend.

Obama, Cambridge police Sgt. James Crowley and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., were to meet at the White House Thursday evening, each one drinking his favorite beer, in a public attempt to move past the emotional event.

WBZ's Carl Stevens was in Washington for the event.  Listen to his reports on WBZ Newsradio 1030.

The chief White House spokesman said the meeting among of the president, a Harvard University scholar and the policeman who arrested him was to be "about having a beer and de-escalation."

Robert Gibbs said that the session, weather permitting, was planned for 6 p.m. at a picnic table outside the Oval Office. "The president wants to continue to take down the temperature a bit," Gibbs said.

Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., who is black, was arrested two weeks ago by Sgt. James Crowley of the Cambridge, Mass., police department, who is white, after a caller telephoned 911 and reported an apparent burglary. Gates, who had been trying to get into his own home, was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge, quickly dropped by Cambridge police.

When Obama said at his news conference last week that the police had "acted stupidly," the national debate over racial profiling escalated to the point that the president went into the White House briefing room on Friday to say he wished he had used different language.

Gibbs said Obama suggested the meeting over beer when he phoned Crowley on Friday. Gates concurred when Obama phoned him next.

On Monday, Cambridge police released copies of the 911 call and radio dispatches made during the controversial arrest of black Harvard scholar Henry Louise Gates Jr.

Listen to the recordings:

Crowley tells dispatchers that Gates was being uncooperative and to "keep the cars coming" for backup.

Another voice can be heard in the background of the transmission, but it is unintelligible and unclear if it is Gates.

Cambridge police released recordings of police radio transmissions and of the 911 call following more than a week of controversy over Gates' July 16 arrest on a disorderly conduct charge. The charge was quickly, but the national debate about racial profiling that the arrest triggered kept building.

Gates' supporters called his arrest an outrageous act of racial profiling. Crowley's supporters say Gates was arrested because he was belligerent and that race was not a factor.

In the 911 recording, caller Lucia Whalen tells police she saw two men pressing on the door of a home, but says she is unsure whether the men live there or if they were trying to break in. She said she saw two suitcases on the porch.

"I don't know if they live there and they just had a hard time with their key. But I did notice they used their shoulder to try to barge in and they got in. I don't know if they had a key or not cause I couldn't see from my angle," Whalen says.

Whalen does not mention the race of the men she saw until pressed by a dispatcher to describe them. At that point, she says one of the men may have been Hispanic.

Whalen was vilified by some bloggers and others last week after it was incorrectly reported that she reported two black men trying to break into a home.

In the radio transmissions, Crowley tells a dispatcher he is at the home where the possible break-in was reported.

"I'm up with a gentleman, says he resides here, but was uncooperative, but keep the cars coming," Crowley said.

In his written police report, Crowley said Gates became angry when he told him he was investigating a report of a break-in, then yelled at him and called him a racist.

Analysis: What they saw during the Gates arrest

Henry Louis Gates Jr. felt the hairs on the back of his neck stand up as he looked across the threshold of his home at Sgt. James Crowley. Looking back at Gates, Crowley worried about making it home safely to his wife and three children.

Fear was the only thing the white police officer and black scholar had in common. Soon their many differences would collide, exploding into a colossal misunderstanding.

How could things go so wrong? How could two by all accounts decent men start a fire that drew comparisons to the O.J. Simpson case and knocked President Barack Obama off his racial tightrope?

Part of the answer lies in the truth seen through each man's eyes during the episode, which ended with one of the most influential men in America charged with disorderly conduct.

If this really is to become a "teachable moment," as Obama hopes, then we have to examine what they saw, according to their public statements - and why they saw it that way.
---
It's early afternoon on Ware Street in Cambridge, a few blocks from the campus of Harvard University. Gates and his car service driver, a large black man, are trying to force open Gates' jammed front door. Lucia Whalen, a 40-year-old white woman who works up the street at the Harvard alumni magazine, is passing by and calls 911.

According to Crowley's police report, he arrived to find Whalen standing on the sidewalk in front of the home. She told Crowley that "she observed what appeared to be two black men with backpacks on the porch ... her suspicions were aroused when she observed one of the men wedging his shoulder into the door," the report says.

No one is blaming Whalen, who has not spoken publicly since the story broke.

"It wasn't her fault," Gates said.

We don't know how she sees the world, what types of experiences color her vision.

But had she shared just one or two different details with Crowley - or if the sergeant had gleaned something else from their conversation - things might have happened differently.

Gates, 58 and gray-haired, says he was dressed in a blazer and walking with a cane. He says his driver was wearing a black suit jacket and matching pants. After they forced open the door, Gates says, the driver carried Gates' luggage into the house, then drove off in the vehicle.

None of that was on Crowley's mind when he walked up the steps to Gates home.
"Witnesses are inherently reliable," he said later. "She told me what she saw."

---
Crowley is on the porch, alone; Gates is inside his home. They apparently notice each other through the front door window at about the same time.

Crowley sees the unknown: "I really wasn't sure exactly what I was dealing with," he said later.

The sergeant is 42, a decorated 11-year police veteran who grew up attending diverse public schools in Cambridge. All three of his brothers work in law enforcement. He's an instructor in a police academy class on how to avoid racial profiling.
He asks Gates to step outside.

"I was the only police officer standing there and I got a report that there was people breaking into a house. (The request) was for my safety, because first and foremost I have to go home at night, I have three beautiful children and a wife who depend on me," he said later.

"So I had no other motive other than to ensure my safety, because this gentleman either could have been one of the people breaking in, or he could have been the homeowner who was unaware that there were people in his house unauthorized. I just didn't know."

Gates, meanwhile, is a renowned scholar of black history who has spent most of his life literally cataloguing the sins of the past in volumes like "Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience."

"I know every incident in the history of racism from slavery to Jim Crow segregation," he said recently.

He knows some of it firsthand. About 1989, hired by Stanley Fish to teach at Duke University in Durham, N.C., "one of the first things Gates did was buy the grandest house in town," Fish wrote in a recent blog on The New York Times' Web site.

"During the renovation workers would often take Gates for a servant and ask to be pointed to the house's owner. The drivers of delivery trucks made the same mistake."

"The message was unmistakable: What was a black man doing living in a place like this?" Fish wrote.

So when Gates hears Crowley ask him to step outside, he sees history. How could he not?

"All the hairs stood up on the back of my neck, and I realized that I was in danger," Gates said later. "And I said to him no, out of instinct. I said, 'No, I will not."'
---
Crowley asks Gates to prove he lives there.

Looking out his front door, Gates sees someone who should be asking, "Is everything all right, sir?" He sees someone who would not doubt that a 58-year-old, gray-haired Harvard professor lived in this home - if he were white.

Gates sees a racist.

Gates leaves the front door to get his identification. Crowley follows him inside. Gates says he provided a driver's license with the address of the home they were standing in; Crowley's police report only mentions a Harvard ID.

"Now it's clear that he had a narrative in his head," Gates said. "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."

Gates demands that the sergeant provide HIS identification.

Crowley sees someone who should be grateful, but instead is yelling and falsely accusing him of being a racist. He sees a problem - "something you wouldn't expect from anybody that should be grateful that you're there investigating a report of a crime in progress," he said.

Neither man understood what the other one saw.
---
Gates continues to demand that Crowley provide his name and badge number.

Crowley said in his report that he had already told Gates his name, twice, but Gates was yelling too much to hear him. Gates said Crowley ignored his demands.

Gates doesn't let up. Crowley says he'll talk to Gates outside. Then he says something Crowley understands perfectly, boiling down his 2,095 pages of "Africana" down into one cry of resistance:

"I'll speak with your mama outside," he said, according to the police report.
Gates denies making the remark.

Should Gates have realized that you can't antagonize the police? Should Crowley have understood what it means to suspect a black man of breaking into his own home? Arguments will persist for years.

Once he recovered his balance, backing off his statement that Crowley acted "stupidly," Obama assumed his traditional position of racial referee and said that both men overreacted.

"My hope," the first black president continued, "is that as a consequence of this event, this ends up being what's called a teachable moment, where all of us, instead of pumping up the volume, spend a little more time listening to each other ... and that instead of flinging accusations, we can all be a little more reflective in terms of what we can do to contribute to more unity."


 


2009 CBS Radio, All Rights Reserved.
07/20/2009 10:24PM
Harvard scholar's arrest raises profiling questions - SOUNDOFF
What do you think?
Title:
Comment:
SEARCH:
wbz.com web
ADVERTISEMENT
AP Video
Search:        
  # | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Featured Businesses Join the Network
Community Associations Institute - New England Chapter
New England's Advocate for Responsible Communities
F & W Pest Control
We’ll Get ‘EM
Winters Company
 
EJP Training Dynamics
 
Jiffy Lube
 
Wakefield Orthodontic Care
Specialties Include: Adult & Child orthodontic care Sleep Apnea treatment TMJ treatments
Helping Hands Of America
DONATE YOUR CAR OR BOAT TODAY TO A LOCAL CHARITY! YOU CAN HELP A GREAT CAUSE RIGHT HERE IN NEW ENGLAND AND IT’S 100 PERCENT TAX DEDUCTIBILE TOO. CALL HELPING HANDS TODAY TO SCHEDULE A PICK UP AT YOUR HOME…1-888-881-9-0-9-0 (NINE OH, NINE OH).
Kars4Kids Car Donation
Kars4Kids is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that provides a wide range of services for underprivileged children. Some of their programs include mentoring, parent education, camp programs, and family retreats. By providing the children with emoti
© 2010 CBS Radio Stations Inc., All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy / Your California Privacy Rights | Advertise With Us | Contact Us | Help
mix1041 Oldoes1033 WZLX 985 WBCN