Police Chiefs Attack Media Coverage, Call it ‘Great Myth’
Two police chiefs from major metropolitan cities are lamenting the way journalists report on race relations and law enforcement.
“I think one of the great myths is that there is some kind of breakdown between the people at the grassroots and their police,” Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn told host Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday.”
“It’s a false construct,” Flynn said. “It’s a canard. The reality is that our officers are out there day after day protecting our communities.”
“There are thousands of police actions that go well everyday you never hear about because they went well,” added Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey.
“Nobody talks about that sort of thing,” Ramsey said. “That’s why police are here to begin with. It really does distort the view of what is going on in policing.”
Flynn and Ramsey’s remarks come amid a summer of increased violence against police officers.
“Fox News Sunday” reported that 24 police officers have died nationwide in attacks against law enforcement since 2015 started.
Ramsey argued on Sunday that the media is focusing more on race relations rather than the actual causes of criminal activity.
That narrative, he charged, is complicating the issue of violence for police departments and the communities they serve.
“There are lot of issues behind crime in our neighborhoods,” he said. “If you’d don’t address the drivers of crime, this is not going to result in anything at all that’s positive.”
Ramsey additionally called on members of the Black Lives Matter movement to exercise restraint when questioning the real issue of police abuse.
“We do have officers that engage in misconduct,” he said. “[But] if all you want to do during a meeting is scream and shout, you’re not going to get very far. It certainly doesn’t help.”
“We’re not sure we’ve just got a spike or a real change phenomenon,” Flynn added of this summer’s rise in violent crime.