There’s been undeniable progress in the relationship between the Tulsa police and the city’s Black community in the past 100 years. Then again, it’s hard to imagine it could have gotten worse.Complaints about police bias and a lack of enough minority.
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There's been some progress in the relationship between the Tulsa police and the city's Black community in the 100 years since the Tulsa Race Massacre left as many as 300 Black people dead and thousands of Black residents displaced
There has been undeniable progress in the relationship between the Tulsa police and the city’s black community in the past 100 years. Then again, it is hard to imagine it could have gotten worse.
Complaints about police bias and a lack of enough minority officers remain.
Yet the police chief is now a black man from north Tulsa, the area that includes what was once the US’ wealthiest black business district.
Back in 1921 decades before the civil rights movement even the thought of a black police chief would have been inconceivable. On May 31 and June 1 that year,
TULSA, Okla. — There’s been undeniable progress in the relationship between the Tulsa police and the city’s Black community in the past 100 years. Then again, it’s hard to imagine it could have gotten worse. Complaints about police bias and a lack of enough minority officers remain. But the police