http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/27/us/kerr-putney-charlotte-police-chief.html 2016-09-27 03:53:49 Kerr Putney, Charlotte Chief, Had Cause in His Life to Distrust Police Caught between defending his officers and regaining the trust of many who claim he has reacted badly to the fatal police shooting of a black man. === CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kerr Putney, who 15 months ago was sworn in as Charlotte’s second black police chief, has spoken openly of his own lingering, lifelong distrust of the police. He has invoked the “racist bigoted history” in American policing. And he has publicly stated that he believes his father’s death was an unacknowledged murder, one poorly investigated by officials in his hometown, Roanoke Rapids, N.C., because the police there “didn’t care about the value of a black life.” In short, little in his life has led naturally to this moment when he has become the prime target of protesters, who gathered in a church here on Monday to demand his resignation and to claim that he was protecting his officers at the expense of the family seeking justice for the Chief Putney received withering nationwide criticism for his “This past week has completely dissolved whatever trust we were attempting to build between Chief Putney and C.M.P.D. and the community, and so for that reason he needs to resign,” Bree Newsome, who spoke at the church, said in an interview, using the initials of the Chief Putney did not respond to a request for an interview. But for some of his allies it has been painful to watch a man whom they have seen as committed to fairness — and particularly the rights of minorities — portrayed by critics as a foe of social justice. “He’s in a tight spot,” said Shaun Corbett, 37, a barber and former felon who turned his life around and has become close to the chief. “He’s had to make some judgment calls, and now he’s left to hold the bag by himself.” Chief Putney, who was hired by the Police Department in 1992, has spoken numerous times about the 1979 death of his father. According to an In a profile in The Charlotte Observer, he said the perceived injustice had made him want to be a lawyer. In a speech this summer, Chief Putney said a police officer he later befriended had convinced him that police work was “a noble profession.” That impassioned five-minute speech, delivered just after a vigilante had “Because of my distrust of police, even now, when I see blue lights it hits me in the stomach,” he said. He balanced this with a staunch defense of his profession, one made up of men and women, he said, “who don’t have the luxury to run away when bad things happen.” He also said he was frustrated by the way a focus on the details of police shootings of minorities could sometimes obscure the bigger picture. “We hide behind, ‘Well, we don’t know all of the facts,’” he said. “Well, I don’t need to know the facts to see another dead black body in the streets and say, ‘That hurts me.’” Chief Putney took over the top spot in the department amid an already roiling debate about race and American policing set off by the 2014 Five weeks after Chief Putney took office, a jury heard opening statements in the After a judge But the case had divided the department and the city, and the new chief was left to rebuild internal morale and public confidence. “The way the Kerrick case was handled left a lot of doubt in the eyes of some of the officers about how supported they were by their command,” said Michael J. Greene, one of Officer Kerrick’s lawyers and a former Mecklenburg County prosecutor. But Mr. Greene said Chief Putney had eventually won over the rank and file. “If you’re walking through the courthouse and ask the patrolmen walking around, ‘What do you think of Chief Putney?’ they’re going to say they’re proud to be wearing a C.M.P.D. uniform again,” Mr. Greene said. He earned the respect of his officers while supporting an effort to have all Police Department employees take classes to recognize “unconscious, implicit bias.” He teamed up with Mr. Corbett, the barber, to help him expand a program he started, called Cops & Barbers, which had sponsored meetings between police officers and young people to help them better understand each other. Chief Putney, 47, is an imposing man, an accomplished martial artist who stands over six feet tall, with a tendency toward introversion. When he speaks in meetings, associates say, he sticks to the facts and tends to avoid pontificating. Last week, he seemed by turns annoyed and steadfast as he insisted that Mr. Scott had been shot because he had a gun, and refused to release publicly any of the dashboard or body camera videos recorded before, during and after the shooting of Mr. Scott by Brentley Vinson, a young officer who is also African-American. The pressure mounted through the week until, on Saturday, he held a news conference and said he had been assured that the distribution of some of the recordings of the shooting would not hamper the state’s inquiry. He denied that public pressure had influenced his decision, an assertion many people here doubted. Some voices here have praised the chief’s handling of the shooting and its aftermath, though they have been quieter than the protesters. “It’s a delicate balance between allowing people to vent and keeping the rest of the community safe,” said Kenneth R. Smith III, a member of the City Council who represents some of Charlotte’s wealthiest neighborhoods. He added, “I think he’s struck that very well.” Some supporters say the uncertainty left by the videos has supported Chief Putney’s case for keeping them private. “Now you have the whole city trying to draw their own conclusions,” Mr. Corbett said. Marcus Bass, a 29-year-old Charlotte resident and activist who works with a collective called Mr. Bass said he suspected an “orchestra of voices behind the scenes” were “helping dictate and narrate how this is rolled out.” He added: “I think there is still a short time where honest dialogue and real discussion can happen. The chief can still do that. But I think that window is closing very fast.”