57 police resign to support officers fired for shoving 75-year-old
More than 50 police officers in Buffalo have
resigned in support of two colleagues who were suspended after video showed
them shoving a 75-year-old peace activist to the ground who then cracked his
head and was hospitalized with severe injuries.
The resigning 57 officers comprised the entire
Buffalo police department (BDP) emergency response team. They will still be
employed by BDP and be paid, but they will no longer work on the emergency
response team.
The shock development, which triggered a wave of
social media outrage, is likely to heighten tensions in the city in New York
state, which like many other places has seen widespread anti-police-brutality
protests in the wake of the killing of George Floyd by a white Minneapolis
police officer.
The protests have been marred by widespread
incidents of police violence against demonstrators and the media that have
triggered condemnation by civil rights groups in the US and overseas. Many of
them have been filmed and spread via social media.
The brutal attack on Martin Gugino by the Buffalo
police seemed to strike a particular chord.
Video from the public radio station WBFO shows
Gugino approaching a line of helmeted officers holding batons as they clear
demonstrators from Niagara Square around the time of an 8pm curfew. Two
officers push Gugino backward, and he hits his head on the pavement. Blood
spills as officers walk past. One officer leans down to check on the injured
man before he is urged along by another officer.
Prosecutors are now investigating and two officers
have been suspended.
“Why? Why was that necessary? Where was the threat?”
asked the New York governor, Andrew Cuomo, at his daily briefing on Friday,
saying he had spoken to Gugino. “It’s just fundamentally offensive and
frightening. How did we get to this place?”
But the local police union boss defended his
officers. “Fifty-seven resigned in disgust because of the treatment of two of
their members, who were simply executing orders,” said John Evans, PBA
president, according to WGRZ.
Byron Brown, the mayor of Buffalo, said contingency
plans were in place “ensure public safety”. Additional state troopers will be
in the city through the weekend to assist Buffalo police, according to a state
police spokesman. Brown said they were working with other agencies.
ugino was hospitalized and was “alert and oriented”,
according to a Friday morning tweet by Mark Poloncarz, the Erie county
executive.
Poloncarz at a briefing later in the day wished
Gugino a “speedy recovery” and said the incident “created a black mark, a stain
on the city of Buffalo”.
Gugino is a retiree who lives by himself in the
area, say friends who describe him as a veteran peace activist driven by his
faith and a desire for social justice. He is involved with the Western New York
Peace Center and Latin American Solidarity Committee, said Vicki Ross, the
center’s executive director.
“I can assure you, Martin is a peaceable person,”
Ross said. “There is no way that he was doing anything to accost or hurt. He
made a judgment to stay out after the curfew because he feels that our civil
liberties are so in danger, which they most certainly are.”
His Twitter timeline includes tweets and retweets
supportive of progressive causes and critical of police. One tweet from
Wednesday read: “The cops should not have clubs. And should not be in riot
gear. The National Guard should arrest the police.”
“It doesn’t
surprise me that Martin was standing there looking at these young cops in the
eye,” Mark Colville of the Amistad Catholic Worker said of his longtime friend.
“It almost looked like he was reaching out to them, trying to shake their hand
or say, ‘What’s going on? Why are you doing this?’”
Buffalo police initially said in a statement that a
person “was injured when he tripped & fell”, WIVB-TV reported, but later
opened an investigation as condemnation spread.
“The casual cruelty demonstrated by Buffalo police
officers tonight is gut-wrenching and unacceptable,” said John Curr, the
Buffalo chapter director for the New York Civil Liberties Union.




