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Outrage after US police lead black man by a rope

by Compiled from Wire Services

ISTANBUL Aug 08, 2019 - 12:33 am GMT+3
by Compiled from Wire Services Aug 08, 2019 12:33 am

A police chief in Texas has apologized after a photo went viral of two officers mounted on horseback walking a handcuffed black man by a rope, as if on a leash. The image caused outrage, serving as a painful reminder of some of the bleakest moments in America's brutally racist past, including the chaining of enslaved people and lynching of blacks in the Jim Crow South in the years after emancipation.

Vernon Hale, police chief for the coastal Texas city of Galveston, said that Donald Neely, who was arrested Saturday for trespassing, should have been taken to the station in a police car, but only mounted officers were available. Neely was then escorted on foot, led by a length of rope and flanked by the mounted officers. The Galveston Police Department apologized over the incident with Police Chief Vernon Hale reportedly saying that while the practice is acceptable in some cases the "officers showed poor judgment in this instance." "First and foremost I must apologize to Mister Neely for this unnecessary embarrassment," Hale said, adding that policy had been changed so that the technique would no longer be used. Neely has been freed on bond, but could not be immediately reached for comment, the Houston Chronicle reported. Hale's statement sparked frustration, with some activist groups saying his response was "weak." Others called for the officers to be penalized or fired for "humiliating" Neely in a manner that recalls extreme acts of racism from the country's past, or even convicted criminals exhibited in public squares. "This is 2019 and not 1819," James Douglas, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's (NAACP) Houston chapter, told the Houston Chronicle.

Democratic 2020 hopeful Beto O'Rourke, who is from the West Texas city of El Paso, also denounced the incident, tweeting, "This moment demands accountability, justice, and honestly (sic), because we need to call this out for what it is: racism at work."

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