NEW YORK(AP)
Gov. David Paterson pledged to examine undercover police conduct
on Thursday, a day after more than 200 people were arrested
protesting the acquittal of three detectives involved in the
shooting death of an unarmed man.
Paterson said he understood the activists' frustrations as
he stood with the slain man's fiancee and the Rev. Al Sharpton,
who were among the demonstrators arrested while disrupting evening
rush hour traffic. But the governor stopped short of endorsing
their actions.
"No civil servant can condone civil disobedience,"
Paterson said, but he added: "They felt that they had no other
choice but to take the action that they took, and I respect the
decision that they made to take that action."
The governor's involvement was a measure of the emotion and
unrelenting attention surrounding the shooting of Sean Bell, who
was gunned down hours before he was to be married in November
2006.
The gunfire stirred complaints about police tactics, and the
acquittals on April 25 in state court prompted some activists to
question the prospects of justice for minorities. Bell was black as
were two of his friends wounded in the shooting; the officers are
black, Hispanic and white.
Paterson, New York's first black governor, said Thursday he
would explore undercover officer procedures, saying the advocates
had suggested plainclothes officers should not suddenly
"change the script" and act as police.
He also said he would consider potential statewide legislation
compelling officers to take sobriety tests after some shootings,
such as those in which police fire at people who prove to be
unarmed. The New York Police Department last year began requiring
such tests when officers kill or wound someone.
Sharpton and Bell's supporters are pressing for federal
civil rights charges in the case. Sharpton _ who orchestrated
Wednesday's protests at the Brooklyn Bridge, the Holland Tunnel
and other major transportation arteries _ promised Thursday to
stage another mass demonstration if progress wasn't made toward
their goals.
The next protest would be somewhere in New York City within
seven to 10 days, said Charlie King, acting national director of
Sharpton's National Action Network.
Federal prosecutors are reviewing the case but declined comment
Thursday.
Bell and his friends were shot as they left his bachelor party
at a Queens strip club. The officers said they believed Bell and
his friends were about to get a gun; no firearm was found.
Bell's friends said the police shot without warning, which the
officers denied.
Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly has said his department is
considering disciplinary action against the detectives.
Sharpton, shooting survivors Trent Benefield and Joseph Guzman
and Bell's fiancee, Nicole Paultre Bell, were released
Wednesday about four hours after their arrests on disorderly
conduct charges. Paultre Bell legally took her fiance's name
after his death.
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