Mayor Asks Protesters to ‘Step Back’ Until After Officers’ Funerals

Mayor Bill de Blasio called Monday for a temporary halt to protests over police conduct as he faced a widening rift with a force preparing Christmastime burials for two of its own and decrying the demonstrations as a factor in the officers’ cold-blooded executions.
Mayor Asks Protesters to ‘Step Back’ Until After Officers’ Funerals
New York City police officers gather near a makeshift memorial on Monday, Dec. 22, 2014, near the site where fellow officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu were murdered in the Brooklyn borough of New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
12/22/2014
Updated:
12/23/2014

NEW YORK—Mayor Bill de Blasio called Monday for a temporary halt to protests over police conduct as he faced a widening rift with a force preparing Christmastime burials for two of its own and decrying the demonstrations as a factor in the officers’ cold-blooded executions.

“I think it’s important that, regardless of people’s viewpoints, that everyone step back,” de Blasio said in a speech Monday at the Police Athletic League.

De Blasio, in his first extensive remarks since the killings, called for “everyone to put aside political debates, put aside protests, put aside all of the things that we will talk about in all due time.”

Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were ambushed Saturday afternoon by a 28-year-old who vowed in an Instagram post that he would put “wings on pigs.” The suspect, Ishmaaiyl Brinsley was black; the slain New York Police Department officers were Hispanic and Asian.

The killings came as police nationwide are being criticized following Garner’s death and 18-year-old Michael Brown’s fatal shooting in Ferguson, Missouri. Protests erupted after grand juries declined to charge officers in either case.

Family Visits

De Blasio said it was time to focus on the officers’ grieving families. He and Police Commissioner William Bratton met with them earlier Monday.

“There’s a lot of pain. It’s so hard to make sense of it—how one deeply troubled, violent individual could do this to these good families,” de Blasio said. “And I think it’s a time for everyone to take stock that there are things that unite us, there are things that we hold dear as New Yorkers, as Americans.”

Investigators are trying to determine if Brinsley had taken part in any protests, or simply latched onto the cause for the final act in a violent rampage. He started off Saturday in Baltimore, shooting his ex-girlfriend in the stomach before coming to New York and killing the officers. He then ran into a nearby subway station and killed himself.

Shaky Footing

The police unions blame de Blasio for fostering anti-police sentiment. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch declared that there was “blood on the hands” on the “steps of City Hall and the office of the mayor.”

Sergeants Benevolent Associations head Edward Mullins refused to back down from that stance, saying in an interview Monday that “the mayor has turned his back on us—he got elected on his campaign of attacking the police all along.”

The characterization—strenuously denied by the de Blasio administration—was given some credence by Police Commissioner William Bratton on Monday. In an interview with NBC, Bratton said “what’s quite apparent, obvious, is that the target of these two police officers was a direct spinoff of this issue of these demonstrations.”

Even Bratton, who has steadfastly praised de Blasio, conceded that the mayor was on shaky footing with some in the NYPD. When asked on NBC’s “Today” show if the mayor had lost the force’s trust and confidence, Bratton said, “I think he’s lost it with some officers.”

Meanwhile, big-city police departments and union leaders around the country were warning the rank and file to wear bulletproof vests and avoid making inflammatory posts on social media.

A union-generated message at the 35,000-officer NYPD warned officers that they should respond to every radio call with two cars—“no matter what the opinion of the patrol supervisor”—and not make arrests “unless absolutely necessary.” The president of the detectives’ union told members in a letter to work in threes when out on the street, wear bulletproof vests and keep aware of their surroundings. At the same time, a memo from an NYPD chief asked officers to limit their comments “via all venues, including social media, to expressions of sorrow and condolence.”

One directive warned officers in Newark, N.J., not to patrol alone and to avoid confrontation. In Philadelphia, Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey urged protest leaders to “call for calm and not let this escalate any further.” Boston’s police commissioner said officers there were on alert.

Officials in New York investigated at least a dozen threats against police since the shootings, and one man was arrested at a Manhattan precinct after he walked in and said: “If I punch you in the face, how much time will I get?” and refused to leave.

From The Associated Press. AP writers Jennifer Peltz and Tom Hays contributed to this report.