NEW YORK — The national civil rights and
advocacy community came down hard on President Trump for comments he
made Friday on Long Island that seemed to encourage violence on the part
of the police.
Organizations from
the Southern Poverty Law Center to the YWCA, and from Amnesty
International to the
American Civil Liberties Union admonished the
president for his words that appeared to endorse excessive use of force
by police. The president made the remarks during a speech touting the
administration’s work to banish the notorious, transnational MS-13
street gang.
In the 35-minute address, Trump
referred to members of the violent gang as “animals” who have
“transformed peaceful parks and beautiful quiet neighborhoods into
blood-stained killing fields.”
Suffolk County has
been particularly hard hit by violence related to MS-13 and has seen 17
murders allegedly committed by the gang since the start of 2016,
according to NPR. One fatal attack included machetes and baseball bats
used on two teen girls, NPR reported.
Trump
vowed the administration would continue to go after the gang and he
appeared to encourage law enforcement to be more violent in handling
suspects.
“When you see these towns and when you
see these thugs being thrown into the back of a paddy wagon, you just
see them thrown in, rough, and I said, ‘Please don’t be too nice,’ “
Trump told the audience of law enforcement officers at Suffolk County
Community College in Brentwood, N.Y.
“Like when you
guys put somebody in the car and you’re protecting their head, you
know, the way you put their hand over, like, don’t hit their head and
they’ve just killed somebody, don’t hit their head, I said, ‘You can
take the hand away, OK?’ “
Advocates who work with immigrants and who promote human rights said the comments advocated divisiveness and hate.
“By
encouraging police to dole out extra pain at will, the president is
urging a kind of lawlessness that already imperils the health and lives
of people of color at shameful rates,” Jeffery Robinson, deputy legal
director at the ACLU, said Friday. “This country is weary of the kind of
policing that Trump espouses, having seen over and over again that it
only makes it harder for police to investigate and solve crime,” he
said.
Casey Harden, interim CEO of the YWCA USA,
said Trump encouraged police to be less careful with the personal safety
of those they are arresting, and said his promises to ramp up border
enforcement would likely target Spanish-speaking communities.
“This
race-centered aggression and lack of nuance is unacceptable from our
nation’s leader,” Harden said. “We are insistent that the president and
his administration immediately stop reinforcing hateful attitudes and
promoting oppressive policies. YWCA USA is dedicated to eliminating
racism, wherever it appears and by any means necessary. As such, we will
continue to speak out against race-based fear-mongering and unjust
public policies.”
Lecia Brooks, outreach director
for the Southern Poverty Law Center, said in a statement Friday that
"it's disgraceful for anyone to advocate abuse against another human
being."
“But for President Trump to endorse
brutality against individuals at the hands of law enforcement officers
who are sworn to protect our communities is absolutely reprehensible.”
Said
Zeke Johnson, senior director of programs at Amnesty International USA:
“This inflammatory and hateful speech will only escalate tensions
between police and communities of color and put both law enforcement and
civilians at risk. Needlessly equipping officers in a manner more
suited to a battlefield than Main Street automatically places them in a
confrontational stance with people they are sworn to protect. Police
cannot treat every community like an invading army, and encouraging
violence by police is irresponsible and reprehensible.”
Friday
night, the president tweeted out video of the speech and appeared to be
expressing defiance in the wake of the criticism, saying, “We will
defend our country, protect our communities and put the safety of the
AMERICAN PEOPLE FIRST!”
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