President Barack Obama said that a grand jury’s decision on Wednesday not to indict a New York City police officer in the death of Staten Island man Eric Garner underlines the need for more efforts to improve the relationships between law enforcement and communities of color.
“My tradition is not to remark on cases where there may still be an investigation,” Obama said while addressing the White House Tribal Conference. But he admitted that this case speaks to “larger issues” such as the feeling within black communities that “law enforcement is not working with them and dealing with them in a fair way.”
Obama said that Attorney General Eric Holder will be delivering more specific comments pertaining to the Garner case, and the Justice Department will conduct a civil rights investigation into the case.
RELATED: Anger flares after no indictment in Eric Garner case
The president touted the task force he convened earlier this week, which he ordered to come up with reforms in the wake of riots and protests in Ferguson, following a grand jury’s decision not indict white police officer Darren Wilson in the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teen, on August 9. Wilson has since resigned from the Ferguson Police Department.
“We are not going to let up until we see a strengthening of the trust and a strengthening of the accountability between our communities and law enforcement,” said Obama. He also emphatically stated that the U.S. must a be a national where “we are all equal under the law,” a remark that was meant with rapturous applause.
“Regardless of race, region, this is an American problem. It’s not just a black problem, or a brown problem … when anybody in this country isn’t being treated equal under the law that’s a problem and it’s my job as president to help solve it,” the president said.








