Portland Police Union President Says Mayor
“Failed Miserably” In Response to Occupy ICE Camp
"There is no place for personal, political bias when it
comes to providing public safety services to our communities," union
president Daryl Turner said.
The Portland police union
openly rebuffed Mayor Ted Wheeler in a statement Friday morning condemning the
mayor's decision to keep local officers from intervening with the Occupy ICE
camp stationed outside of a federal building in southwest Portland.
"There is no place
for personal, political bias when it comes to providing public safety services
to our communities," Portland Police Association president Daryl
Turner said in a statement on
Facebook.
"In that respect, our Mayor, who is also our Police Commissioner, has
failed miserably."
Turner's statement may be
the most pointed rejection of a police commissioner in a decade. And it arrives
on the eve of Portland police attempting to calm dueling protests that have
drawn national attention and local unease.
Wheeler came under fire
after a WW report Monday
revealing that the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement union had threatened legal action if the mayor
continued to a policy to keep local police from responding to calls for service
made by federal officials. The mayor says no such policy exists.
ICE employees have said
police refused to show up to help employees enter and exit the federal ICE
building or to retrieve vehicles from the parking lot
that had been blocked by protesters.
Wheeler says he did not
want police to "get sucked in" to conflicts between ICE officials and
protesters. He decried the family separation policy adopted by the Trump
administration as "un-American."
Turner voiced support for
Police Chief Danielle Outlaw in his statement—making a clear distinction
between her orders and the mayor's.
"We appreciate the
words of support from Chief Outlaw and continue to look to her for operational
guidance on important policing matters," he said.
Outlaw said Portland
police had responded appropriately to
ICE calls,
prioritizing responding to any incident where someone's safety was being
threatened.
"As Mayor, Mr.
Wheeler can certainly have his own personally held political beliefs,"
Turner said. "In contrast, as Police Commissioner, he must set his
personal political beliefs aside and ensure public safety is his top priority.
Politics have no place in the operations of the Portland Police Bureau."
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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