NYPD Commissioner Refuses to Apologize for Behavior of Cops at Stonewall
Almost 48 years after police raided the Stonewall Inn and inadvertently helped kicked off the LGBTQ rights revolution, NYPD Commissioner James P. O’Neill declined an opportunity to apologize on behalf of the department for its actions on that fateful day.
Stonewall Inn–which President Obama declared as the country’s first national monument celebrating LGBTQ rights about a year ago–was raided by plainclothes and uniformed NYPD officers in June 1969 for not having a liquor license. The State Liquor Authority would not grant appropriate licenses to many of the city’s gay bars, and it was illegal to serve alcohol to gay patrons.
In response to the arrests and police behavior at the raid, a rebellion—led by trans people of color—erupted for six days, sparking the movement for LGBTQ rights.