NYPD Commissioner Tisch doubles down against Pride March ban on gay cops in uniform: ‘PR stunt'
In a strongly worded letter to the event's organizer, Heritage of Pride, calling the group hypocrites, Tisch demanded that it change its stance on the officers' exclusion from the celebratory procession. The top cop slammed the new reason given for not letting the gay officers march — namely, that it would violate the event's no-weapons policy — calling it a 'PR stunt' and 'Not a solution.'
'It is also the height of hypocrisy to request the security and protection of thousands of armed, uniformed police officers for The March on Sunday and then ban from that event the very officers that proudly represent your community,' Tisch said in the letter.
'In a year when LGBTQ+ rights are under siege in ways we had thought were behind us, this is the time to stand together, not to splinter,' Tisch added. 'In that light, I urge you to reconsider your decision here. Regardless of the ultimate outcome.'
Heritage of Pride, about two weeks ago, informed the New York Police Department, including the Gay Officers Action League, or GOAL, that it was continuing its ban for the fourth straight year against allowing police officers to march.
'Though the NYPD remains a partner in monitoring and addressing security threats, the NYPD response is to be called upon only when absolutely necessary,' an internal memo from Heritage of Pride states. 'Additionally, the guidelines for our March were updated to clarify that no participating contingent could march with weapons.'
Tisch on Friday said she was shocked by the decision, given earlier dialogue she and Detective Brian Downey, GOAL's president, had had with Heritage of Pride officials.
HOP spokesman Chris Piedmont stressed that the organization has a no-weapons policy, to which GOAL would not agree. However, NYPD officers are required to have their service weapons on them while they are in uniform 'as a matter of public and personal safety,' according to Tisch's letter.
'To be clear,' Piedmont told The New York Daily News on Friday, 'GOAL is welcome to march without weapons like every other contingent and we welcome them to join us as we march to protect trans youth, advocate for full equality and stand in proud defiance of the attacks our community is facing.'
The ban was first announced in 2021, when protests over the killing of Minnesota man George Floyd by police officers generated a wave of anti-cop sentiment across the country, including in New York City. But it's also rooted in the trauma many in the LGBTQ community have experienced in dealing with law enforcement for years — going back to the 1969 Stonewall riot, which was sparked by a police raid at the now-famous Greenwich Village gay bar. The ensuing Stonewall protests are considered the birth of the modern gay rights movement.
Brian Downey, GOAL's president, announced that in response to the ongoing ban, the organization will be protesting on Sunday, starting at 11 a.m., at W. 20th St. and Fifth Ave., five blocks away from the starting point of the Pride March.
'This isn't a time for apathy or complacency,' Downey said. 'It's a time for visibility! It's a time for protest!'
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