for BigTrial.net
for BigTrial.net
The Police Commissioner reported directing a Deputy Commissioner to call her for authorization before deploying CS gas that afternoon. However, she too learned that the CS gas had been deployed in real time over police radio. According to the Police Commissioner, she did not authorize its use.
"The Police Commissioner initially shared this view, testifying on October 20, 2020 before City Council that there was 'no playbook' or 'reference'" for the George Floyd riots. But during her interview with the controller, Outlaw "acknowledged that the City could have better planned for the events that occurred on May 30th."
The police commissioner also told the City Council that “was no specific intelligence, specific to Philadelphia,” the report says, that predicted "the unrest would be as violent and destructive as it was." But, the city controller's report says, the media had carried multiple reports about violence in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Chicago and Memphis.
And Philadelphia did have intelligence that the George Floyd protests would have a "significant impact upon Philadelphia," the city controller's report states.
The city controller's report quotes one supervisor as saying, "There was enough intelligence throughout open source media on what was happening throughout the country regarding riots. The approach taken to planning for this detail completely underestimated what was going to happen and left us woefully underprepared. Had we been better prepared, we would not have lost the city the way we did."
"Another officer agreed with this assessment, noting under the 'planning' section of his after action report: 'Was there any? Department appeared completely unprepared, despite violent protests and rioting in Minneapolis, St. Paul, Portland, Seattle and Atlanta, prior to scheduled protest,'” the controller's report states.
And contrary to what Outlaw told the City Council, the city controller's report noted, the city did have a playbook for how to handle large gatherings. And that playbook was successfully deployed during Pope Francis's visit to the city in 2015, the Eagles Super Bowl victory parade in 2018.
In addition, the police department had handled previous demonstrations that spread to Philadelphia over the 2014 death of Michael Brown in police custody in Ferguson, and the 2015 death of Freddie Gray in police custody in Baltimore.
The problem was Mayor Kenney had previously purged the police department of its former leadership that implemented the playbook, including former Police Commissioner Richard Ross, and Deputy Police Commissioner Joseph Sullivan.
And Kenney replaced that leadership with Outlaw.
The city controller's report prompted the editorial board of The Philadelphia Inquirer today to demand that Mayor Kenney call on Outlaw to resign.
To which the First Street Journal humorously replied, "The Editors of The Philadelphia Inquirer blame the puppet, not the puppet master!"
Outlaw should resign. In a city that had 499 murders last year, and 47 murders over the first 28 days of this year, she is as clueless about how to stop the killing as she was about how to stop the riots, looting and arson fires that accompanied those peaceful protests.
As a low-profile and introverted West Coast native who is usually out of sight behind her desk, Outlaw has the completely wrong personality to deal with an in-your-face town like Philly. She also has completely mismanaged the police department from day one.
But her hire was a cynical political ploy that was all about the optics, and a woke mayor playing to the holy trinity of Progressive Democratic cult values -- race, sex and diversity.
The failure of leadership involving the George Floyd riots can be directly blamed on Kenney's gutting of the Police Department's previous competent leadership, and the hiring of Outlaw.
It's all Kenney's fault. He's the one who should resign. But in a city that's been under one-party Democratic rule for the past 69 years, neither Kenney nor Outlaw is going any where.
At a press conference today, Outlaw told reporters that she had just got through conferring with the mayor and other top city officials, and that they had expressed their support for her to stay on as police commissioner.
"I have not been asked to resign nor will I resign due to the report's findings," she said.
She stated that although she appreciated the "thoroughness" of the controller's report, she insisted there was no "blue print" in the Philadelphia Police Department for how to handle protests on the magnitude of the George Floyd protests.
She also complained that it was "repugnant" for the controller to draw parallels to the 1985 MOVE bombing, which was the last time city police deployed tear gas on its own citizens.
We're all learning from our mistakes, Outlaw said. "We will weather this storm together and we will continue to work through this."
Then, she opened up the press conference to take questions from reporters, saying that she had plenty of time for it.
But when Jeff Cole of Fox 29 asked whether Outlaw considered herself competent to continue to preside over the police department, she abruptly left the podium.
“Assistant District Attorney Chesley Lightsey is not only an excellent and capable trial prosecutor, she comes to this job with thoughtful compassion for the communities we serve,” District Attorney Krasner said.
“She and this office are after individual justice in each case, which benefits all of society," Krasner expounded. "Doing individual justice in each case requires a lot of work and experience, a moral compass, breadth of vision, and sound judgement. ADA Lightsey will do a great job as the Interim Supervisor of the Homicide and Non-Fatal Shooting Unit.”
"Chesley did confirm that both men were still alive and both had criminal records so they were able to locate them," Vargas said about the other two suspects in her sister's murder.
But when Vargas asked Lighstey why the D.A.'s office wasn't doing anything to prosecute the other two murder suspects, Vargas said Lightsey told her, "Oh the case is complicated," and that there was "a lot of digging to do."
I emailed Vargas's comments to Lightsey, but she said she was declining to discuss specific cases "out of respect for the victims and their families, who continue to suffer."
During a second visit to the D.A.'s office, Vargas demanded to meet with D.A. Larry Krasner.
"He was not familiar with my sister case and had to scramble through paperwork in front of him," Vargas said.
Vargas said she and her family argued that "my sister deserved justice," but "Krasner had zero and I mean zero empathy . . . He was like a robot sitting there."
Krasner also spoke to the Vargas family in Spanish, which they thought was condescending, so they asked the D.A to please use English.
"It's 100% clear that he is biased for these criminals," Vargas said about Krasner. "There is no sympathy" for victims. We were standing on opposite sides. We're on opposite teams."
I emailed Vargas's comments to Krasner and Roh, and both declined to respond.
Before he got on a trolley at 30th Street and Market, White said he took off his white T-shirt "so I could wipe the blood off my face."
"Was that blood on your face your blood or Sean's blood," Voci asked.
"It was Sean's blood," White said.
White said he put the bloody t-shirt in his backpack, and then he rode the trolly to 52nd and Lancaster, where his Aunt Tonya lived.
When he got off the trolley, he threw the backpack with the bloody T-shirt in a trash can on the street, because "I just wanted to get everything off of me," White said. "I wanted to get rid of everything because it, it was a scary situation I didn't intend to kill anybody. I didn't have that in my mind."
Next, White said, "I took the knife out of the bag and I just threw it on somebody's roof."
Although White claimed he didn't intend to kill Schellenger, White admitted to Voci that he did intend to stab him.
Voci didn't have any more questions.
Krasner took over.
"So Michael, I don't have a lot of questions about the incident," Krasner said. "But I do want to ask you some other questions about your life."
Krasner asked if White was a member of a church.
"I don't go to church regularly," White replied, "but I do believe in God."
Krasner asked about White's hobby of writing poetry, and if he ever wrote a poem about the killing of Schellenger.
"No," White replied.
Krasner asked about White's education, the schools he went to, and why he dropped out of Morgan State University in Baltimore.
"I was suffering a lot back home," White told the D.A.
The D.A. asked about the trouble at home.
His mother was struggling, White said, because she didn't have "enough money."
Krasner asked about White's grades at college during the two semesters he was there.
"They weren't very like spectacular at all," White said, before admitting to the D.A.'s follow-up questions that his grades were "failing."
"How do you feel about what you did?" Krasner asked.
"I feel extremely remorseful for the simple fact that a man's life was lost," White said. "I also feel remorseful for the fact that his family had to bury him in a manner in which they didn't expect. And personally, it's something that I want to take back because I know murder is a sin. That weighs heavily
like on my mind on a daily basis ever since this happened."
"I thought I heard you say basically that you turned yourself in because they knew that they would catch you," Krasner said. "Is that, is that accurate or did I misunderstand you?"
"I think you misunderstood me because it wasn't a thing where I was trying to run or get away," White said. "I want that to be very clear. I wasn't running from anything. The only thing I ran from was the crime scene because I was shocked at what had just happened . . ."
"I want to make that clear," White said. "Because I feel like you guys think that I wanted to escape from this somehow, some way when that was not my intention. I am a person who accepts full responsibility when they do something wrong. I'm a person who understands when they do something wrong. I'm a person who will own up to that."
"So did you do something wrong?" Krasner asked.
"Personally, I was defending my life, so no, I don't think I did something wrong, but in the eyes of God, yes, I did do something wrong," White said. "I took a person's life. That's a sin. When you read the Bible, that's part of the ten commandments."
"Why did you take out the knife?" Krasner asked.
"What were you hoping to accomplish when you pulled out that knife," Krasner asked.