[h=1]Obama: Still far from solving police, community issues[/h]
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUBLISHED: 03:38, 14 July 2016 | UPDATED: 03:39, 14 July 2016
WASHINGTON (AP) — America is "not even close" to where it needs to be in terms of resolving issues between police and the communities they serve, President Barack Obama said after concluding a more than three-hour meeting Wednesday with community activists, politicians and law enforcement officials.
Obama expressed optimism, however, and said the participants — who included members of the Black Lives Matter movement — agreed such conversations need to continue despite emotions running raw.
Obama has devoted his attention this week to the gun violence directed at police officers as well as shootings by police. The focus comes a few days after a black Army veteran killed five police officers in revenge for police shooting black men in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and the Minneapolis suburbs.
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From left, Sherillyn Ifill, President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and Terry Cunningham, President of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, look to President Barack Obama, right, as he speaks to media at the bottom of a meeting at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington, Wednesday, July 13, 2016, about community policing and criminal justice with a group made of activists, civil rights, faith, law enforcement and elected leaders. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUBLISHED: 03:38, 14 July 2016 | UPDATED: 03:39, 14 July 2016
WASHINGTON (AP) — America is "not even close" to where it needs to be in terms of resolving issues between police and the communities they serve, President Barack Obama said after concluding a more than three-hour meeting Wednesday with community activists, politicians and law enforcement officials.
Obama expressed optimism, however, and said the participants — who included members of the Black Lives Matter movement — agreed such conversations need to continue despite emotions running raw.
Obama has devoted his attention this week to the gun violence directed at police officers as well as shootings by police. The focus comes a few days after a black Army veteran killed five police officers in revenge for police shooting black men in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and the Minneapolis suburbs.
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From left, Sherillyn Ifill, President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and Terry Cunningham, President of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, look to President Barack Obama, right, as he speaks to media at the bottom of a meeting at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington, Wednesday, July 13, 2016, about community policing and criminal justice with a group made of activists, civil rights, faith, law enforcement and elected leaders. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)