Obama regrets remarks in racially charged case

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – President Barack Obama  backed down yesterday from a statement that police had “acted  stupidly” in arresting a black scholar in a racially charged  case that was rapidly becoming a distraction for Obama.

The president made a surprise appearance in the White House  press briefing room shortly after he spoke by phone to Cambridge,  Massachusetts, police Sgt. James Crowley, who had arrested Henry  Louis Gates, a prominent scholar of African-American studies at  Harvard, last week.

“Because this has been ratcheting up and I obviously helped  to contribute ratcheting it up, I wanted to make clear in my  choice of words I think I unfortunately gave an impression that  I was maligning the Cambridge Police Department or Sgt. Crowley  specifically,” Obama said. “And I could have calibrated those  words differently.”

Crowley suggested Obama invite him and Gates, to the White  House for a peace-making beer, and a plan was in the works to do  so, Obama said.

The case quickly became a media frenzy, with Cambridge  police in an uproar, Gates accusing Crowley of racist behavior and  threatening a lawsuit.

For Obama, who took office as the first U.S. black president  in January. the incident was a distraction when his signature  legislative priority, a healthcare overhaul, was stalling in the  U.S. Congress. Obama said he hoped the event would end up being a “teachable  moment, where all of us instead of pumping up the volume spend a  little more time listening to each other” and improve race  relations “instead of flinging accusations.”

“Lord knows we need it right now — because over the last  two days as we’ve discussed this issue, I don’t know if you’ve  noticed, but nobody has been paying much attention to health  care,” he said.

The incident began last week when police received a call  from a neighbor that a man appeared to be breaking into the  Gates’ house.

Gates, who returned home from a week in China to discover  his front door jammed, entered his house through the back door.  Police say Gates became belligerent when they went to the house  and spoke with him inside.

At a news conference on Wednesday night, Obama weighed in on  the case, saying the Cambridge, Massachusetts, police had “acted  stupidly.”

Obama pointed out that blacks and members of other   minority  groups tend to be stopped more frequently by U.S. police   officers  than whites.

Until yesterday, Obama and the White House had defended  Obama’s remarks. The police union stoked tensions further,  firing back at Obama.

“President Obama said that the actions of the Cambridge  Police Department were stupid and linked the event to a history  of racial profiling in America,” Sgt. Dennis O’Connor,  president of the Cambridge Police Superior Officers Association,  said at a news conference in Cambridge. “The facts of this case  suggest that the president used the right adjective but directed  it at the wrong party.”

With the incident threatening to escalate, Obama chose to  engage in some damage control.

He did not say he had apologized to Crowley, but his words  were regretful. Obama said his impression of Crowley was that he  was an “outstanding police officer and a good man, and that was  confirmed in the phone conversation. And I told him that.”

He said his choice of words had unfortunately given an  impression “that I was maligning the Cambridge police department  or Sergeant Crowley specifically. And I could have calibrated  those words differently. And I told this to Sergeant Crowley.”

Obama said he continued to believe that there was an  overreaction in arresting Gates and that he also believed that  Gates “probably overreacted as well.”