The Week That Was on Deadline Detroit
The Week That Was on Deadline Detroit
Detroit in Black And White: Ex-Police Chief Ike McKinnon Says Lifting Residency Requirement Harmed City
Ex-Detroit Police Chief Isaiah "Ike" McKinnon says lifting the residency requirement for Detroit police has hurt the department.
"That literally killed us," McKinnon says during an interview Saturday on the videocast, "Detroit in Black and White," with host Adolph Mongo and co-hosts Vanessa Moss and Allan Lengel.
McKinnon, who was police chief from 1994-1998, was referring to officers who don't reside in the city, which he says has resulted in less ties and concern about Detroit and its neighborhoods.
In 1999, the state, under Gov. John Engler, enacted a law prohibiting residency requirements for police officers and other municipal employees.
McKinnon, 79, also expresses skepticism about a recently announced 12-point safety plan to address violence downtown, saying "it's not a new plan. They did it before, he said, acknowledging that it was not effective.
"I don't know how well this is going to work," he added.
And he also talks about the need for more parental responsiblity in the city to help curb crime and the racism he faced inside the department as a young officer.
The show also includes some snippets from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's oral history of Allan Lengel's mother, Miriam Lengel, who was a survivor of the Auschwitz concentration camp during World War II.
The group discusses the Holocaust and Black slavery.