Black leaders to Tulsa: Act on pledges of racial harmony
TULSA, Okla. — Tulsa community leaders say the acquittal of a white Oklahoma police officer who killed an unarmed black man ripped open a long-festering wound.
From the mayor’s office to schools and churches, race relations have been terrible in Oklahoma’s second-largest city for well over a century.
So black community leaders on Thursday welcomed Mayor G.T. Bynum’s mention of racial disparities on the day after a jury of Tulsans found officer Betty Jo Shelby not guilty of manslaughter. In September, she fatally shot 40-year-old Terence Crutcher in the middle of a city street after observing his disabled SUV.
“This verdict does not alter the course on which we are adamantly set,” said Bynum, who took office in December. “It does not change our recognition of the racial disparities that have afflicted Tulsa historically.”


