Clinton: End 'madness' of police killings

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at the 107th National Association for the Advancement of Colored People annual convention at the Duke Energy Convention Center in Cincinatti, Monday, July 18, 2016.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at the 107th National Association for the Advancement of Colored People annual convention at the Duke Energy Convention Center in Cincinatti, Monday, July 18, 2016.

CINCINNATI -- Hillary Clinton on Monday called for an end to the "madness" after the death of three law enforcement officers in Baton Rouge, condemning a series of recent shootings involving police and vowing to hold people who kill police officers legally accountable.



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"They represent the rule of law itself. If you take aim at that and at them, you take aim at all of us," Clinton told civil-rights activists at the annual NAACP convention. "There can be no justification, no looking the other way."

The presumptive Democratic presidential candidate condemned the killing of three Louisiana law enforcement officers, the latest in a recent string of shootings involving black men in Louisiana and Minnesota and police officers in Dallas. She said anyone who kills a police officer or acts as an accomplice must be held accountable.

"We have difficult, painful, essential work ahead of us to repair the bonds between our police and our communities and between and among each other," she said.

A former Marine ambushed police in Baton Rouge on Sunday, killing three law enforcement officers in the attack. Three other officers were wounded, one critically. The shooting, the fourth high-profile deadly encounter involving police over the past two weeks, added to the tensions across the country between the black community and police.

Clinton also acknowledged that the violence has gone both ways, pointing out the socioeconomic disparities that have plagued the black community to the nearly uniformly black audience.

"Another hard truth at the heart of this complex matter is that many African-Americans fear the police," she said. "I can hear you."

Clinton has proposed a series of overhauls to the criminal justice system, including developing national guidelines on the use of force by police, new investments in bias training, legislation to end racial profiling and funding for body cameras. She also has pushed for cutting mandatory minimum sentences, particularly for drug offences, and providing better support to help the formerly incarcerated find jobs after prison.

Campaigning 250 miles south from where Republicans gathered for the first day of the party's national convention in Cleveland, Clinton poked at presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump's decision not to speak at the NAACP convention.

The black vote was a critical part of President Barack Obama's two national victories, and no state -- perhaps other than Florida -- demonstrates why better than Ohio, where black voters produce troves of Democratic votes in Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati, among a few other smaller cities.

Trump's strategy in Rust Belt states like Ohio is to maximize both white turnout and his share of that vote, while presuming that Clinton simply cannot match Obama's performance in the black community.

"Hillary Clinton's platitudes on gun control and public safety will not ensure an America in which both civilians and law enforcement can feel safe in their own neighborhoods. Donald Trump wants to restore law and order to our communities and make America safe again," said Telly Lovelace, Republican National Committee national director of African American Initiatives.

Clinton's campaign is launching a major voter mobilization drive during the Republican National Convention, with a goal of getting more than 3 million to register and commit to vote in the 2016 election.

Information for this article was contributed by Ken Thomas and Bill Barrow of The Associated Press.

A Section on 07/19/2016

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