Advertisement
Live

Obama in Dallas to comfort a nation in mourning

Share via

Obama paid tribute on Tuesday to the five Dallas police officers who were killed by a lone gunman at a Black Lives Matter protest last week. The country is simultaneously mourning the officers’ deaths and the shooting deaths of black men at the hands of police in Baton Rouge, La., and Falcon Heights, Minn.

The story so far:

Dallas Black Police Assn. president: Speech was ‘magnificent’

An honor guard passes photos of the fallen police officers during a memorial service at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, Tuesday, July 12, 2016, in Dallas.
(Eric Gay/Associated Press)

Lt. Thomas Glover, president of the Dallas chapter of the Black Police Assn., called Obama’s speech “magnificent.”

“He was able to merge the solemn occasion of the two young men who lost their lives in Minnesota and Louisiana with the loss of the officers,” Glover said.

Glover said the president wasn’t rushing to judgment, that he needed to address the “epidemic” of “young African American men losing their lives at the hands of police.”

Glover knew one of the officers killed, Patrick Zamarripa, 32. He supervised him at the jail. Zamarripa, or “Z” as his buddies called him, was always willing to help, he said. He was the one you’d call to get lunch when no one else was willing to go.

“When I heard his name that night I said, ‘Oh no, not Patrick,’” Glover said. “I believe he would be asking us to come together and move on, that human lives matter.”

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via

Texas representative: Obama ‘honored the officers but also the pain a lot of others feel’

Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) called the president’s speech “raw” and said he struck the right balance, “recognizing the pain of all people.”

“He was no less empathetic to those families of police than he was in acknowledging the decades of oppression of black Americans,” said Jackson-Lee, who is black.

“The audience sat with deep listening. When we left out of there we were hugging each other,” she said. “He obviously set the right tone. He didn’t leave anyone out or diminished. He honored the officers but also the pain a lot of others feel.”

Jackson-Lee also liked former President Bush’s comment about not judging groups by their worst members. And she noted the symbolism of seeing the two leaders of different races and parties speaking together.

“Let’s see if we can find a common path. America needs to pause and feel the hurt of others,” she said.

Jackson-Lee is one of the leaders of the congressional gun task force that’s trying to pass legislation limiting gun sales online, among other things. While the president mentioned the threat to police of guns flooding neighborhoods, he didn’t speak much about them and she said that was “appropriate.”

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via
Advertisement

Head of police chiefs’ association on Obama in Dallas: ‘This is the most open, honest and raw I’ve ever seen him.’

President Obama speaks at a memorial service in Dallas.
(Susan Walsh / Associated Press)

Terry Cunningham, president of the International Assn. of Chiefs of Police, attended Tuesday’s event after meeting with the president, vice president and leaders of several other law enforcement groups Monday.

“Part of the president’s frustration was he felt reform wasn’t happening fast enough,” Cunningham said.

Police in turn said they expected more from Obama.

“Some around the table didn’t think he was very supportive of law enforcement,” Cunningham said.

He said the president’s comments during the meeting were echoed in his speech.

“This is the most open, honest and raw I’ve ever seen him,” Cunningham said.

Cunningham acknowledges that “there are clearly police officials who are racist” as in other professions, and that “we have to find a way to root that out.”

But he said he and others at the meeting cautioned the president not to weigh in on videos of police shootings before they have been investigated.

“We said just don’t rush to judgment in incidents like that - you fuel the debate,” he said.

Obama agreed, saying, “we don’t know what happened yet, but I can still support the families.”

And then “he did it again today” Cunningham said.

Cunningham wished Obama had not mentioned Castile or Sterling Tuesday, and instead kept the focus on police.

“We talked to him about that: When police officers get killed, you’re not calling them. There’s got to be a balance there,” Cunningham said, noting that while Obama met Tuesday with relatives of the fallen officers in Dallas, and sends letters to families of others killed, he declined Cunningham’s invitation to meet with the widow of a Virginia state trooper killed earlier this year.

“It’s right in his backyard. Didn’t happen, and yet he calls the families of Sterling and Castile,” Cunningham said as he left after the speech, wearing his dress uniform.

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via

Watch former President George W. Bush speak about slain Dallas police officers

Former president George W. Bush speaks at an interfaith memorial service for five slain police officers in Dallas

Share via
Advertisement

Obama grapples with ‘how inadequate my own words can be’

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks during the Interfaith Tribute to Dallas Fallen Officers at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center in Dallas, Texas.
(LARRY W. SMITH/EPA)

President Obama, in a striking bit of candor as he mourned slain Dallas police, reflected on how “inadequate words can be in bringing about lasting change.”

“I’ve seen how inadequate my own words can be,” he added.

It’s something the president has been grappling with privately, and now openly: what to say amid a relentless pace of gun violence and racial unrest.

In his remarks the president cited scripture: “Let us long not with words and speech but with actions and truth.”

“If we’re to sustain the unity we need to get through these difficult times, if we are to honor these five outstanding officers who we’ve lost, then we will need to act on the truths that we know,” he said. “And that’s not easy, it makes us uncomfortable. But we’re going to have to be honest with each other and ourselves.”

Michael A. Memoli

Share via

Obama: Everyone should be able to hear the pain of Alton Sterling’s family

Share via
Advertisement

Obama: We are not as divided as we seem

“The deepest fault lines of our democracy have now been exposed, perhaps even widened,” President Obama said Tuesday in Dallas. “And though we know such divisions are not new, that offers us little comfort. Faced with this violence we wonder if the divides of race in America can ever be bridged. We wonder if an African American community that feels unfairly targeted and police departments that feel unfairly maligned for doing their jobs can ever understand each other...

I understand. I understand how Americans are feeling. But I’m here to say: Dallas, we must reject this despair. We are not as divided as we seem.

And I say that because I know America. I know how far we have come against impossible odds. I know we will make it because of what I’ve experienced in my own life. What I’ve seen of this country and its people and their goodness, their decency, as president of the United States. And I know it because of what I’ve seen here in Dallas.”

Share via

Dallas Police Chief David Brown quotes Stevie Wonder in tribute to slain officers

Share via
Advertisement

George W. Bush: ‘At our best, we practice empathy’

Former U.S. president George W. Bush speaks during an interfaith memorial service for the victims of the Dallas police shooting at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center on July 12, 2016 in Dallas, Texas.
(MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)
Share via

President Obama at memorial service for slain offers

President Obama attends a memorial service for five slain Dallas police officers with Vice President Joe Biden, Laura and George W. Bush and First Lady Michelle Obama at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center.
(Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)
Share via
Advertisement

Minister, imam and rabbi pray for healing in Dallas

Share via

Obama consulted scripture in preparing Dallas remarks

U.S. President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama attend an interfaith memorial service for the victims of the Dallas police shooting at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center on July 12, 2016 in Dallas, Texas.
(MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

President Obama personally wrote much of the speech he will deliver Tuesday at the memorial for five slain Dallas police officers, working late into the night Monday on a draft.

The White House said Obama consulted scripture as he prepared his remarks.

He did the same last summer when he spoke at a memorial service for the victims of the Emmanuel AME Church massacre in North Charleston, S.C. The theme of his speech was “Amazing Grace,” and he closed his remarks by singing the hymn.

Michael A. Memoli

Share via
Advertisement

Obama arrives at memorial; national anthem sung

Share via

Ted Cruz joins Obama in flight to Dallas in show of unity

For the second time in less than a month, a former Republican presidential candidate joined President Obama on Air Force One to travel to his state to memorialize shooting victims.

Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida joined Obama during a somber visit to Orlando on June 16. Tuesday, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas traveled on the presidential jet with Obama to Dallas.

Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the White House extended the invitation to Cruz, one of the administration’s most ardent congressional foes.

“At a time when our country is so divided, I think it is important that the country’s leaders are coming together across party lines despite significant political differences to emphasize a shared desire to unify the country,” Earnest told reporters.

The state’s other Republican senator, John Cornyn, will speak at the service, as will former President George W. Bush. It’s an indication, Earnest said, that “our country is not nearly as divided as it might seem.”

“Unfortunately, it’s in moments of tragedy that this unity is revealed,” Earnest said.

Michael A. Memoli

Share via
Advertisement

Obama calls families of black men shot to death by police last week

Share via

Seats in front row remain empty in honor of Dallas officers

Reserved seats contain American flags and police hats during an interfaith memorial service, honoring five slain police officers, at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center on July 12, 2016 in Dallas, Texas.
(Tom Pennington/Getty Images)
Share via
Advertisement

While Dallas waits for Obama, Black Lives Matter protesters demonstrate outside LAPD headquarters

Share via

Daughter of fallen Dallas officer in the front row at memorial service

Patrick Zamarripa, 32, one of the officers killed last week, left behind a 2-year-old daughter, Lyncoln. The girl played in the front row of the concert hall as mourners filed in for an interfaith memorial service for the slain officers.

Zamarripa’s father and fellow officers have said that Lyncoln was the apple of his eye, and he posted plenty of photos online of himself toting her around in a baby carrier or in his arms.

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via
Advertisement

Philando Castile’s mother says she received a phone call from Obama

Share via

Dallas police officers embrace before memorial

There was a standing ovation as what appeared to be families of the fallen officers arrived and filed into seats at the front of the concert hall.

Scores of uniformed police filed in behind them, greeting each other with handshakes and bear hugs.

A black officer in a jacket with “police” written across the back stopped to hug Misty McBride, the Dallas Area Rapid Transit officer injured in the shooting, who was in uniform with her arm in a cast.

Other family members hugged police, cradled children and wiped away tears.

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via
Advertisement

The five slain Dallas police officers

Share via

Hillary Clinton pauses during Sanders endorsement to call for criminal justice reform

Share via
Advertisement

View of the crowd awaiting Obama in Dallas

Share via

Obama in Dallas: ‘I need him to say something that can unite both sides’

Salvador Villarreal, 20, a junior at Texas A&M University, was invited to Tuesday’s event with members of his brother’s Dallas Boy Scout troop.

“He has the words to motivate the city,” Villarreal said of Obama. “I need him to say something that can unite both sides: the people who think all police are bad and the people who think those fighting the Black Lives Matter movement are fighting a cause with no purpose.”

His mother, Lupita Villarrea,l said she hopes the president can be a calming influence on a city in turmoil.

“I want him to understand, to give us a message of peace and respect,” she said in Spanish, adding that she hopes Obama “helps us improve as a society, destroying racism because without that, we can’t do anything.”

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via
Advertisement

Awaiting Obama

Share via

Dallas mayor arrives

Share via
Advertisement

Philando Castile’s funeral set for this week

Share via

Dallas police mourn their fallen officers

Dallas Police Officer Victor Guzman, who was on the sniper shooting scene, holds a candle with his wife, Ciprina, as family and friends of fallen police officers take part in a candlelight vigil at City Hall in Dallas.
(Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times)

The police family often speaks in code, badge numbers and radio signals, expects rookies to pay their dues and veterans to have each others’ backs.

A death in the family is never easy.

The fatal shooting of five officers killed on the job protecting a downtown protest here last week widowed not just spouses but partners, mentors, trainees and entire units.

Read MoreMolly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via
Advertisement

‘The president’s words will matter today’

Gary Crosby, 53, a dental assistant in nearby Plano, brought his 9-year-old son Dillon to downtown Dallas hours early to see the president.

An Obama supporter, Crosby wore a shirt with the president’s photo that said “America believes now” -- but he said he was feeling disappointed.

“Gun legislation should have been a priority years ago,” before recent mass shootings. Crosby said. “Even though he spoke out a lot during the tragedies, sometimes you can’t just talk.”

Crosby said he and other parents in the his son’s Cub Scout troop have wrestled with how to explain the shooting to their children. Before they drove to Dallas on Tuesday, his son said he was afraid, and asked, “What about the snipers?”

Crosby wasn’t invited to the event but planned to stand outside and listen to the president speak via livestream on his cellphone. He expected to hang on every word.

“The president’s words will matter today. We had two officers killed in Michigan yesterday. So his words have to have meaning, not only to you and me, but to him,” he said, pointing to his son sitting in the grass, “and to Congress and the candidates. He’s got to give Hillary and Trump something they can make a reason to curb gun violence.”

Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Share via

Obama heads to Dallas, determined to bridge the divide deepened by shootings

President Obama heads Tuesday to Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.
(Susan Walsh / Associated Press)

As President Obama prepares to eulogize five slain police officers in Dallas on Tuesday, he is coming to the conclusion that he will not be the one who heals the country’s racial divisions.

Neither the protesters who demanded accountability after shootings of black men by white officers last week nor the law enforcement community stricken by the deaths among their ranks appear to be heeding Obama, who has pleaded repeatedly since the violence began for each side to listen to the other.

But Obama says he is committed to keep speaking out on racial conflict and criminal justice.

Read MoreChristi Parsons

Share via
Advertisement