NYC police boss: We’re trying to apologize to ex-tennis pro
Former tennis star James Blake said Thursday he wants an apology after a case of mistaken identity led police to handcuff him and take him to the ground, but New York’s police commissioner said Blake hasn’t returned his calls.
“I’d like an apology,” Blake said on ABC’s “Good Morning America. “I’d like an explanation for how they conducted themselves because I think we all need to be held accountable for our actions, and police as well.”
Police Commissioner William Bratton said he’d been trying to reach Blake by phone to apologize but he hadn’t responded to messages. Bratton also said his department wants Blake to speak to its Internal Affairs division.
Blake said he was standing outside Manhattan’s Grand Hyatt New York hotel on Wednesday waiting to head to the U.S. Open when he looked up from his cellphone and saw an officer charging him. He said he was body-slammed.
He told officers to check his identification, and he was released. Blake said the plainclothes officer never identified himself.
The officer has been stripped of his gun and badge while the matter is investigated.
Blake, who’s biracial, told the Daily News he wasn’t sure if he was arrested because of his race but said the officer who put him in handcuffs inappropriately used force.
Bratton told CNN the man officers were seeking looked like “the twin brother of Mr. Blake.” He told The New York Times that initial video evidence suggests the force involved in the arrest may not have been inappropriate.
A cooperating witness had misidentified Blake to detectives investigating fraudulently purchased cellphones, said Stephen Davis, spokesman for the New York Police Department.
“Once Blake was properly identified and found to have no connection to the investigation, he was released from police custody immediately,” Davis said in a statement.
But Blake said their actions weren’t acceptable.
“I was standing there doing nothing – not running, not resisting, in fact, smiling,” he said.
Officers arrested a suspect in the cellphone scam at the Grand Hyatt New York hotel in Manhattan during a controlled buy earlier Wednesday, police said. It was after that buy that a deliveryman with the cellphone company pointed out Blake and another man in the hotel lobby as having purchased cellphones the day before, officers said.
The second man, who Bratton said was standing next to Blake, was taken into custody. A hotel security guard, a former member of the NYPD, recognized Blake, prompting the arresting officers to confirm his identity.
Blake’s last tournament as a professional was the 2013 U.S. Open, where he lost in the first round of singles and doubles. He was ranked as high as No. 4 in the world and reached three Grand Slam quarterfinals, including at the U.S. Open in 2005 and 2006.
AP Tennis Writer Howard Fendrich and reporter Michael Balsamo contributed to this report.
This story was originally published September 10, 2015 at 4:02 AM with the headline "NYC police boss: We’re trying to apologize to ex-tennis pro."