OK, at first I thought this story about a Harvard Professor breaking into his own house (on the Harvard campus) and then getting arrested for disorderly conduct after berating the Cambridge Police Department was just going to fade away and die. It was fairly amusing at the time but after the charges were dropped I assumed it would go away.
I forgot this was Harvard, capital of The People's Republic of Cambridge.
No sooner than you can spot stink on shit does Al Sharpton appear.
Story continues, with relevant details:
So to summarize:
1. Woman sees two men break into Gates' housing, not realizing it was Gates and his driver, calls Cambridge police.
2. Cambridge Police show up, investigate, and ask for ID.
3. Gates pulls a classic "Do you know who I am?" and then reluctantly shows his ID, then goes on to berate the officer (or continues as the case may be).
4. Officer gets fed up with the threatening demeanor, bad attitude, and verbal abuse and arrests him for disorderly conduct. Gates gets let go the same day with a nominal fine and a slap on the wrist, charges are later dropped.
For a Yale-Educated Harvard Professor, he certainly seems unable to understand the concept that the police are doing their job, deal with plenty of cons breaking into homes claiming to be the owners, and more generally, insulting an officer is a stupid thing to do. A Princeton man wouldn't have made this mistake.
One last note on Gates' silliness as reported in this followup:
The criminal charges were dropped, therefore Gates has no criminal "record" to speak of, unless "arrested for disorderly conduct and charges dropped" consists of a litany of malevolence.
This story isn't over, Gates could still sue or find some other way to keep this story from blowing over, thus continuing his 15 minutes. He's already made a good go of it accusing Sgt. Crowley of incompetence, malevolence, and racism.
Note: The post title was based on boston.com audio The New Republic claimed was up wherin Gates supposedly uses "Crowleyed", a verb construct meaning "to Crowley" (compare: Borked or "to Bork" for the viciously attacked supreme court nominee of the same name). Boston.com does not make it easy to find audio, and may have edited it out of the one I heard (they control for clarity and content).
I forgot this was Harvard, capital of The People's Republic of Cambridge.
boston.com said:Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., one of the nation's pre-eminent African-American scholars, was arrested Thursday afternoon at his home by Cambridge police investigating a possible break-in. The incident raised concerns among some Harvard faculty that Gates was a victim of racial profiling.
Police arrived at Gates’s Ware Street home near Harvard Square at 12:44 p.m. to question him. Gates, director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard, had trouble unlocking his door after it became jammed.
He was booked for disorderly conduct after “exhibiting loud and tumultuous behavior,” according to a police report. Gates accused the investigating officer of being a racist and told him he had "no idea who he was messing with,'' [DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM? -Ed.] the report said.
Gates told the officer that he was being targeted because "I'm a black man in America.''
No sooner than you can spot stink on shit does Al Sharpton appear.
boston.com said:The Rev. Al Sharpton is taking up the banner of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., accusing Cambridge cops of racism for arresting Gates, and vowing to stand by his side at an arraignment next month.
“I’ve heard of driving while black, and I’ve heard of shopping while black. But I’ve never heard of living in a home while black,” said Sharpton, a New York minister who has made a national name for himself by seizing on cases of alleged racism.
Story continues, with relevant details:
A witness, 40-year-old Lucia Whalen of Malden, had alerted the cops that a man was “wedging his shoulder into the front door” at Gates’ house “as to pry the door open,” police reported.
A law enforcement source said Gates apparently had locked himself out. When Sgt. James Crowley arrived, he said Gates already was inside. But when he was asked to provide identification, Gates allegedly snapped, “No, I will not!”
Police said Gates’ front-porch tirade about racism “alarmed” passers-by drawn to the uproar outside his Cambridge home.
As Crowley tried to question him, police said Gates bellowed, “This is what happens to black men in America!”
Crowley claimed in his report he tried to calm Gates, but wrote that Gates “shouted, ‘You don’t know who your (sic) messing with!”
After calling Crowley “a racist,” according to police reports, the professor was charged with disorderly conduct and released for a $40 fee. Gates is scheduled to be arraigned on a single charge of disorderly conduct Aug. 26 at Cambridge District Court in Medford. The maximum penalty Gates faces if convicted is a $150 fine.
Repeated efforts to reach Gates and his lawyer for comment were unsuccessful. Cambridge police declined to respond to the allegations of racism.
So to summarize:
1. Woman sees two men break into Gates' housing, not realizing it was Gates and his driver, calls Cambridge police.
2. Cambridge Police show up, investigate, and ask for ID.
3. Gates pulls a classic "Do you know who I am?" and then reluctantly shows his ID, then goes on to berate the officer (or continues as the case may be).
4. Officer gets fed up with the threatening demeanor, bad attitude, and verbal abuse and arrests him for disorderly conduct. Gates gets let go the same day with a nominal fine and a slap on the wrist, charges are later dropped.
For a Yale-Educated Harvard Professor, he certainly seems unable to understand the concept that the police are doing their job, deal with plenty of cons breaking into homes claiming to be the owners, and more generally, insulting an officer is a stupid thing to do. A Princeton man wouldn't have made this mistake.
One last note on Gates' silliness as reported in this followup:
Gates said:“Because of the capricious whim of one disturbed person . . . I am now a black man with a prison record,” Gates said. “You can look at my mug shot on the Internet.”
The criminal charges were dropped, therefore Gates has no criminal "record" to speak of, unless "arrested for disorderly conduct and charges dropped" consists of a litany of malevolence.
This story isn't over, Gates could still sue or find some other way to keep this story from blowing over, thus continuing his 15 minutes. He's already made a good go of it accusing Sgt. Crowley of incompetence, malevolence, and racism.
Note: The post title was based on boston.com audio The New Republic claimed was up wherin Gates supposedly uses "Crowleyed", a verb construct meaning "to Crowley" (compare: Borked or "to Bork" for the viciously attacked supreme court nominee of the same name). Boston.com does not make it easy to find audio, and may have edited it out of the one I heard (they control for clarity and content).