It
is outrageous that a comedian, who has over the course of his
lifetime probably made more than the current Detroit budget deficit,
would save his toughest rhetoric for a diatribe attacking individuals
who are merely trying to "make it" everyday. Perhaps people are
fascinated by the prospect of Dr. Cosby bringing the gospel of
"bootstrap upward mobility" to Detroit and urban center across the
nation because so many things seem not to be going right. What
Dr. Cosby said about justice and the law struck the most strident and
discordant note in me, and in many Detroit citizens. He said, 'Why are
you afraid of the police?' Why are Detroiters afraid of the police? Why
not ask Daron Caldwell, falsely accused of murder in the nationally
infamous Detroit Fireworks
shooting melee last year? Mr. Caldwell was held for weeks with minimal
and contradictory evidence, in light of the mysterious loss of
exculpatory evidence, and released only when a strong community
response and good lawyering forced the Detroit Police Department and
the Wayne County Prosecutors Office to admit that they had erred in
holding him as they lacked evidence to proceed. He is now suing the
City for $100 million. The good doctor needs to do his research. The
City of Detroit is one of the most dangerous cities for citizens in the
country. In eight
years, we have had more than 55 suspicious killings of citizens by
Detroit police officers. The City has paid tens of millions of dollars
for these egregious mishandlings, and is now under a Federal Consent
Judgment for its shoddy police practices. In fact, Federal District
Court Judge Julian Cook recently castigated the Department for its
failure to progress on mandated and required improvements in police
procedure and practice while he at the same time has failed to include
the very citizens and organizations who made this a public issue. [more]