8 Sept 12th-Sept 18th, 2024 phoenixnewtimes.com PHOENIX NEW TIMES | NEWS | FEATURE | FOOD & DRINK | ARTS & CULTURE | MUSIC | CONCERTS | CANNABIS | Covering for Cops Ruben Gallego betrays progressive roots, shills for police. BY ZACH BUCHANAN W hen a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd in 2020, U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego was infuri- ated. The killing was “straight up murder,” the Phoenix Democrat tweeted from his campaign account. He demanded that the police officers involved be prosecuted. In the days that followed Floyd’s killing on May 25, Gallego tweeted that American policing needed “long-term, systemic change” and called on Congress to “imme- diately pass legislation to require indepen- dent prosecutors for all police related shootings & deaths.” The Marine veteran criticized the militarization of police departments and expressed outrage at a video showing Buffalo, New York, police officers using excessive force against an elderly protestor. Later that summer, he joined a protest in Phoenix against police brutality. But in Phoenix, the activist groups that have long fought for police accountability weren’t buying it. “He’s a political opportunist,” said Lola N’sangou, the executive director of Mass Liberation Arizona. “And we see it.” As Gallego heads into the final stretch of his Senate run against Republican fire- brand Kari Lake, his commitment to police reform is a hot topic. On Aug. 26, the Arizona Police Association endorsed Gallego over Lake, mere days after a repre- sentative of the organization spoke onstage at former President Donald Trump’s rally in Glendale. Then, after the blue backed him, Gallego backed the blue. On Aug. 27, Arizona’s Family obtained a letter — which was also posted on the Facebook page of the Phoenix Law Enforcement Association — that Gallego sent to the U.S. Justice Department. In the Aug. 27 letter, Gallego downplayed the DOJ’s alarming report on Phoenix police’s rampant civil rights violations, which included a history of trampling the rights of homeless people, use of excessive and deadly force and discrimination against minorities. He also argued that Phoenix police do not need federal oversight. “It is clear a pattern or practice of civil rights violations does not exist,” Gallego wrote, “and it is certainly not the kind of situation Congress envisioned when it gave the DOJ the authority to conduct investi- gations of this type.” Gallego’s campaign did not respond to a list of questions from Phoenix New Times. ‘Utterly silent’ Gallego’s letter was depressing for police accountability groups in Arizona. But it wasn’t surprising. For one, they know this is how the polit- ical economy works. “When candidates get endorsed by police unions, these are the same elected officials that become the barriers for police accountability,” said Viri Hernandez, the executive director of Poder in Action. But mostly, activists in Phoenix never trusted Gallego’s commit- ment to police reform in the first place. Gallego, they said, tweets a big game about reining in bad policing, and he did vote to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. The legislation lowered the standard for convicting police officers of misconduct, limited qualified immunity and granted administrative subpoena power to the Justice Department in pattern-or-practice investigations. When the Senate failed to take up the bill, Gallego stumped for it repeatedly. But when Gallego speaks up about police violence, Phoenix activists notice, it tends to be when it happens far from Arizona. When his constituents are the victims of excessive police force — and considering that Gallego’s district includes much of overpoliced south and west Phoenix, a disproportionate number have been — those constituents can’t get a word out of him. After Floyd’s death, Gallego said that “we need to bring in federal prosecutors” to investigate police-involved shootings, a position seemingly at odds with his current resistance to federal police oversight. But when Arizona Department of Public Safety deputies killed Dion Johnson mere days earlier, Gallego didn’t address it. Nor did Gallego ever mention Johnson on his campaign Twitter account or his official U.S. House one. A year afterward, he did include Johnson’s name in a statement that was mostly about Floyd. That same year, when video surfaced of the 2017 killing of Muhammad Muhaymin by Phoenix police — in a manner very similar to Floyd’s death — Gallego issued no statement. Gallego was also silent later that summer when Phoenix police arrested and the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office charged a group of anti-police protesters as a made-up criminal street gang. Activist organizations “were asking him to take a stand,” said Hernandez. “ There was no letter on behalf of the protesters who were politically prosecuted.” N’sangou said Mass Liberation spoke to Gallego’s office, requesting meetings and pleading for him to weigh in, but he was “utterly silent.” In 2021, after Gallego expressed support for a federal probe into Phoenix police, a former aide posted a letter criti- cizing his silence about the prosecutions. Ne’Lexia Galloway — who married one of the arrested protesters, Bruce Franks, in 2023 — wrote that she pressed Gallego to weigh on on the protestor prosecutions but he wouldn’t. “I now feel what so many Black people have felt and expressed over the years,” she wrote. ”Used.” In a statement sent to the Arizona Republic at the time, a Gallego spokes- person said that “after serious consider- ation and consultation, it was determined that it was not appropriate for Rep. Gallego to intervene.” “Like so many other so-called progres- sive Democrats in this state,” said N’sangou, “Gallego has only ever paid lip service to Black folks and our concerns about policing.” Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego, now running for Senate in Arizona, downplayed the severity of the issues facing Phoenix police in a letter to the U.S. Department of Justice. (Photo by TJ L’Heureux) >> p 10 Viri Hernandez, executive director of Poder in Action, said U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego “has not talked to communities, has not talked to these families in our district” about their issues with Phoenix police. (Photo by Katya Schwenk) | NEWS |