This week’s unrest in Baltimore over the death in police custody of Freddie Gray has added yet more fuel to a high-decibel national conversation about police treatment of young minorities. But it also has shined a spotlight on the policies pursued by a former mayor of the city, Martin O’Malley—and perhaps dealt a serious blow to O’Malley’s already long-shot bid to outflank Hillary Clinton for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination.
Since Monday’s riots, O’Malley’s zero-tolerance, tough-on-crime tactics when he led the city have come under fire from a diverse range of critics, who say that approach played a key role in creating the frayed relationship between the city’s police and the community they serve.
As he tours key presidential nominating states to lay the groundwork for an expected run, the controversy may at the very least make it harder for O’Malley to tout his success in reducing Baltimore’s crime rate when he ran the city from 1999 to 2007.
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“Baltimore went on to achieve the biggest reduction in crime of any major city in America,” O’Malley said recently in Polk County, Iowa.
It could also fatally undercut his effort to portray himself as the progressive alternative to Clinton on domestic policy issues like tackling inequality—especially as he faces competition for that role from Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont socialist who announced a presidential run this week.
O’Malley’s highest-profile antagonist has been David Simon, the creator of “The Wire,” the critically-acclaimed HBO drama about Baltimore’s drug war. Simon, a former Baltimore Sun reporter, charges that O’Malley’s no-holds-barred police tactics aimed to reduce crime by any means necessary in order to further the mayor’s political ambitions.
“What happened under his watch as Baltimore’s mayor was that he wanted to be governor,” Simon told Bill Keller of the Marshall Project in an interview published Wednesday. “And at a certain point, with the crime rate high and with his promises of a reduced crime rate on the line, he put no faith in real policing.”
Instead, said Simon, O’Malley’s police force initiated a policy of mass arrests aimed at clearing the streets, which ultimately led to an ACLU lawsuit that alleged “a broad pattern of abuse.” (The city agreed to pay $870,000 to settle the suit in 2010).
After his tenure as mayor ended, O’Malley served two terms as Maryland’s governor.
Simon appears to have long had a dim view of O’Malley. The character of Tommy Carcetti on “The Wire,” an ambitious and calculating local politician who goes on to become mayor, is said to have been based on O’Malley.
Steve Kearney, an O’Malley spokesperson, said “Baltimore’s policing strategy evolved over time and as violent crime was reduced, arrests also declined — a trend that has continued in the years since. Distrust between police and citizens is a challenge that all cities, including Baltimore, have long struggled with — and that continues today.”
And some community activists have defended O’Malley’s approach as an appropriate response to the high crime rates of the era.
But Simon is hardly alone. Michael Steele, who was Maryland’s lieutenant governor while O’Malley ran Baltimore, has also weighed in.
“You couldn’t sit on your stoop, people were harassed,” Steele, a former top Republican official appearing on msnbc’s Morning Joe Tuesday, said of O’Malley’s tenure as mayor. “And so all these tensions have been building and simmering for some time. The trigger, obviously, is the death of Freddie Gray, but there’s systemic issues there.”
Carl Stokes, a Baltimore city councilman, said that under O’Malley, the police actively pulled back on building ties to the community.
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“They ended their relationship with the young people in the city,” Stokes told msnbc’s Thomas Roberts. “They stopped the athletic leagues, they stopped the mentoring, the stopped the computer labs. We need to re-engage our police officers with our community, with our young people so that they see the police as friends and mentors as opposed to occupied forces.”








