Pubdate: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Robert D. McFadden ELITE POLICE UNIT IN DIALLO SLAYING GETS AN OVERHAUL After weeks of protests over the combative police policies of the Giuliani administration, Commissioner Howard Safir yesterday unveiled major changes in the Street Crime Unit aimed at averting confrontations like that in which four white officers gunned down Amadou Diallo, an unarmed black man, last month. Commissioner Safir, reflecting Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani's more conciliatory approach to the biggest crisis of his tenure, said that 50 of the 380 officers in the overwhelmingly white plainclothes unit would be replaced with minority members, and that all of its officers hereafter would work in uniform to minimize potentially deadly confusion in heat-of-the moment face-offs on the streets. The addition of minority members to a unit that often works in minority communities appeared to provide advantages, while the change to uniforms, some said, could hinder officers who often rely on stealth. Mr. Safir said the unit, whose members roam in unmarked cars searching for crimes and suspected robbers, rapists and gunmen, has made 67 percent fewer arrests since the shooting of Mr. Diallo on Feb. 4, apparently because its officers have been affected by the storm of criticism and protest. The unit has been widely accused of stopping an inordinate number of black and Hispanic citizens, many of whom tell of abuses by officers who might be mistaken for street toughs. "The thinking is that the community's concerns were that Street Crime officers in plainclothes were not necessarily recognizable," Mr. Safir said at a news conference after another day of protests outside Police Headquarters, where the Rev. Jesse Jackson was one of 216 people arrested, bringing the total to 1,009 over the past two-and-a-half weeks. As more than a thousand people chanted and cheered under a warm spring sun, embracing reports that a Bronx grand jury had indicted the four Street Crime officers on murder charges in the death of Mr. Diallo, there seemed to be a change in the mood of the crowd, from the anger and vitriol of previous days to one of victory and even pride in what had been accomplished. "We go to jail for the American dream," Mr. Jackson told the crowd before submitting to the plastic handcuffs and the orchestrated arrest. "This is a great day. This is a day of joy. This is a day of hope. Diallo bore the crucifixion in his body. That crucifixion has been turned to resurrection." Mayor Giuliani, who has held a series of meetings with minority leaders in recent days and has changed a caustic and dismissive tone to one more balanced and conciliatory, met at Gracie Mansion last night with 10 members of the City Council's Black and Latino caucus. Afterward, facing reporters, the Mayor was soft-spoken, almost contrite, as he described the meeting as "the beginning of an important dialogue in which we come to a better understanding of how to deal with the difficult situations that confront us." Asked if he should have met with the group earlier, Mr. Giuliani, who has never cultivated close ties to black and Hispanic elected and civic leaders, said: "Sure, I wish we'd had this meeting earlier. It might be I made a mistake in not being more open to meetings like this." A day after the reported indictments, as the Mayor scheduled more meetings with minority leaders, including the State Comptroller, H. Carl McCall, and as Commissioner Safir outlined reforms in the Street Crime Unit, the Diallo case, which has dominated the political dialogue in New York for weeks, seemed subtly to have turned a corner. Gov. George E. Pataki, at a breakfast in Manhattan, reiterated a backhanded rebuke of the Mayor and Mr. Safir. He praised both for "an outstanding job" that had made "the safest streets since the 60's." But he added: "We have to listen to those who disagree with us. We have to accept criticism. We have to be willing to have a dialogue, even when we ultimately disagree." City Comptroller Alan G. Hevesi, a Democrat who is expected to run for Mayor when Mr. Giuliani departs, said at a luncheon yesterday that he used to think that racism in the Police Department was limited and sporadic, but that he had now come to believe that there was a "systemic" problem in some communities, and that the Mayor and his opponents needed to "swallow their hostility toward one another" and work out problems together. The Bronx District Attorney, Robert T. Johnson, refused again yesterday, as he had on Thursday, to confirm reports that the four officers — Sean Carroll, Edward McMellon, Kenneth Boss and Richard Murphy — had been indicted on second-degree murder charges in the death of Mr. Diallo, who was slain in a hail of 41 bullets outside his building at 1157 Wheeler Avenue in the Bronx. The officers, on the advice of their lawyer, did not testify before the grand jury and thus offered no justification for the shooting. While they have never said publicly what happened, a lawyer who represented them early in the case said they believed Mr. Diallo had a gun and shot him in self-defense. Although the indictments remain sealed, a lawyer with knowledge of the case and a law enforcement official confirmed Thursday night that the grand jury had voted the indictments, and they noted yesterday that the indictments probably would be unsealed on Tuesday. Officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity cited several possible reasons for Mr. Johnson's delay in making the indictments public. For one, they said, the prosecutor hoped that Mr. Diallo's relatives would be in court for the arraignment. Mr. Diallo's mother and other family members were expected to arrive in New York from Conakry, Guinea, on Monday. By coincidence, moreover, another notorious case against four white police officers — these accused of attacking the Haitian immigrant Abner Louima last year — is to open with jury selection in Federal court in Brooklyn on Monday, and Marvyn M. Kornberg, who represents Officer Carroll in the Diallo case, must be there because he also represents an officer in the Louima case. Other reasons for delaying the unsealing, officials said, are technical and logistical. Many details remain to be worked out for the surrender of the officers, who would most likely turn themselves in at a Bronx precinct station house, where their arrests would be processed, and then be transferred to State Supreme Court on the Grand Concourse for arraignment. They have been assigned to desk duty, but would be suspended when the indictments were made public. Finally, the officials said, the Bronx District Attorney is probably proceeding with great caution to draw up the indictments properly to avoid any procedural errors. When Officer Francis X. Livoti was first indicted in 1994 in the death of Anthony Baez, on whom he was said to have used an illegal choke-hold, the indictment was thrown out because of a clerical error in its drafting. Commissioner Safir, who has been under fire himself for trips to California during the growing protests, said at his news conference yesterday that 50 of the officers assigned to the Street Crime Unit would be transferred to robbery squads and replaced with minority members, dramatically transforming the composition of the unit. In addition to placing all of the unit's officers in uniform, making them instantly recognizable to the public, the Commissioner said he intended to give the officers more supervision, changing the ratio of one supervisor for every four officers to one supervisor for every three officers. Moreover, he said, all of the members will be promoted to detective-specialists, giving them a raise. He did not specify the amount. Mr. Safir's spokeswoman, Marilyn Mode, said that the higher title and higher pay would attract a higher caliber of officer to the unit. "He wants to create a career path," Ms. Mode said of the Commissioner, "and he feels that there has not been a career path, and that has deterred officers from pursuing assignment to the Street Crime Unit." Mr. Safir said he had ordered the changes after meetings with various community and political leaders, including one yesterday with C. Virginia Fields, the Manhattan Borough President, who has been among the most ardent critics. Mr. Safir said that in the seven weeks since the Diallo shooting, the Street Crime Unit had recorded a precipitous drop of 67 percent in arrests. The number of stop-and-frisk reports filled out by officers also has dropped sharply. Meanwhile, he said, shootings have increased in areas where the unit operates. "I can only speculate to the fact that the individuals in Street Crime are concerned about taking enforcement action for being criticized," Mr. Safir said. "The media has been relentless on vilifying Street Crime, and I think that this has definitely had an effect." The Commissioner's moves drew praise from the Mayor and other elected officials, including the City Council Speaker, Peter F. Vallone. But many police officers, piqued for years over what many of them regard as the Giuliani administration's tightfistedness in wages and other benefits, were puzzled and hurt by the Commissioner's plan to give promotions and raises only to the Street Crime officers. "You mean all we had to do to get a raise was shoot an unarmed guy 41 times?" said one officer at Police Headquarters, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "Why didn't he tell us earlier? Four cops in that unit just did something terrible — even if it was a mistake, it was just awful — so everyone in the unit gets raises? It's absurd." Many officers also questioned the wisdom of having the unit's officers wear uniforms instead of street clothes. Stealth is an advantage, allowing officers to descend quickly on suspected drug dealers or gunmen, while uniforms will only make them conspicuous. But adding minority members to a unit that has been almost exclusively white was widely praised by officers. "Street crimes works in neighborhoods that are mostly black or Spanish," one officer said. "So if the officers are all suburban cowboys, it's not going to work. The community is going to be resistant. The cops are going to be more anxious. Common sense tells you that if you have a more diverse unit, the cops are almost certain to treat people on the street more respectfully." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart