diverse community and they 
need to be very understanding 
… we want somebody who 
is compassionate as well as 
authoritative.”

On Jan. 14, City Council 

will 
hold 
a 
work 
session 

outlining the goals for this hire. 
Hayner said the current police 
climate has taken a toll on the 

department and their hiring 
prospects.

“We are having a heck of 

a time trying to fill our ranks 
because no one wants to be a 
police officer right now,” Hayner 
said. “I highly recommend that 
we are doing ride alongs to see 
(the community) through the 
law enforcement officer’s eyes.”

Hayner 
discussed 
the 

necessity of the new chief being 
able to train others.

“What any department needs 

is a real strong leader who is 
going to set the tone for the 
department and someone who 
is going to do the training to 
avoid the situations we see on 
the news,” Hayner said. “I think 
it’s really important that we 
find someone who sets a tone of 
tolerance in the department.”

During the meeting, Thomas 

highlighted the community’s 
strong emphasis on the future.

“The point that I would 

emphasize is that there are 

issues and circumstances 
that has led to the model 
that is being used today,” 
Thomas 
said. 
“What 

I’m 
hearing 
from 
the 

community is that there 
is a willingness to move 
past that. I have not heard 
anybody say that they’re 
so stuck in the past that 
they’re not willing to 
move into the next stage.”

When asked about the 

challenges facing the next 
chief, Thomas emphasized 
the 
department’s 

challenges with workforce 
turnover and diversity. 
However, 
he 
said 
he 

would not favor a minority 
candidate.

“Clearly there’s been 

questions about staffing 
and turnover,” Thomas 
said. “Diversity of the 
workforce 
is 
another 

challenge, but these issues 
aren’t 
unique 
to 
Ann 

Arbor. The goal is not 
necessarily the race. The 
goal is the philosophy.”

Hayner said he was 

looking for someone who 

would be progressive in leading 
the police department.

“It’s a look at someone who 

is versed not only in ridged 
academy training but in new 
styles of policing, community 
policing 
and 
restorative 

justice and diversion practices 
... 
finding 
a 
balance 
and 

embracing and testing out new 
ideas,” Hayner said. “There is 
a perception problem and (we 
need) someone who is going to 
be intolerant of poor behavior 
in the department.”

Throughout 
the 
hearing, 

residents discussed concerns 
regarding 
the 
financial 

inequalities in Ann Arbor based 
on factors such as education 
and social privilege, with some 
saying they knew of people who 
had left the community because 
of a high cost of living and the 
lack of middle- and low-income 
housing. They said they wanted 
the incoming police chief to 
understand the concerns and 
politics of the community.

LSA freshman Audrey Ling 

said she was satisfied with 
the current work of the police 
department and hopes the new 
police chief can help continue 
this good work.

“It seems like the crime in 

the area is not as severe, so it 
seems like they’re doing a good 
job,” Ling said.

In talking about what she 

would want from a police 
chief, Ling discussed the large 
responsibility that falls on the 
police chief.

COVE RING THE PE ACH BOWL

ON THE DAILY: UNIVERSITY ALUM DARREN CRISS WINS GOLDEN GLOBE 

THIS WEEK IN HISTORY: CLINTON SEXUAL HARASSMENT CASE TO PROCEED

On the Daily: University 

alum Darren Criss becomes 
first Filipino-American to 
win Golden Globe

SMTD graduate and actor 

Darren Criss became the 
first Filipino-American to 
win a Golden Globe award 
at the 2019 Golden Globe 
Awards in Beverly Hills 
Sunday.

Criss received the award 

for best actor in a limited 
series or TV movie for The 
Assassination 
of 
Gianni 

Versace, where he portrayed 
Andrew Cunanan, the serial 
killer who murdered Gianni 
Versace and four others.

Criss has always been 

proud 
of 
his 
Filipino 

heritage, and credited the 
award to his mother who 
grew up in Cebu, Philippines.

“This has been a marvelous 

year for representation in 
Hollywood, and I am so 
enormously proud to be a 
teeny tiny part of that as the 

son of a firecracker Filipino 
woman 
from 
Cebu 
that 

dreamed of coming into this 
country and getting to be 
invited to cool parties like 
this,” Criss said. “Mom, I 
know you’re watching this.”

Criss also played Blaine 

Anderson in Glee. He also 
performed at the inaugural 
balls of the 57th Presidential 
Inauguration and released 
an independently-produced 
EP in 2010.

January 10, 1996
WASHINGTON (AP) - An 

Arkansas sexual harassment 
case 
against 
President 

Clinton can go to trial, a 
federal appeals court ruled 
yesterday, setting the stage 
for a Supreme Court battle. 
Clinton’s 
attorney 
argued 

that Clinton should not be 
questioned under oath on 
such matters while serving 
as President. But an appeals 
panel in St. Louis decided on a 
2-1 vote that the case brought 
by a former Arkansas state 
employee, Paula Jones, can 

proceed.

“The President, like all 

other government officials, is 
subject to the same laws that 
apply to all other members of 
our society.” The court ruled. 
“A sitting President is not 
immune from civil suits for 
his unofficial acts.”

“Obviously, we’re a little 

disappointed, but there was 
a 
very 
strong 
dissenting 

opinion...which 
we 
believe 

the 
Supreme 
Court 
will 

follow, assuming it takes the 
case,” said Robert Bennett, 
Clinton’s attorney.

If the top court did agree to 

take the case, there’s virtually 
no chance a trial would start 
before the 1996 election. The 
Supreme Court would not 
hear arguments until October 
at the earliest, and a decision 
would not be expected until 
sometime next year.

Jones, a former Arkansas 

employee, alleges that Clinton 
sexually harassed her during 
an encounter in a Little Rock 
hotel suite in 1991. She has 
said she rejected Clinton’s 
suggestion that they engage 
in sex. Clinton has denied 

ever having an encounter 
with Jones, and has said he 
cannot recall whether he ever 
met her. Bennett has tried 
to have the case dismissed 
on grounds of presidential 
immunity.

In a statement, Gilbert 

Davis, one of Jones’ attorneys, 
said 
his 
client 
was”very 

pleased” 
with 
yesterday’s 

ruling. 

“This 
goes 
beyond 
the 

parties in the case because 
it stands on the proposition 
that no one is above the law,” 
Davis said. 

He said the next step - 

barring any further legal 
delays - would be taking sworn 
statements 
from 
Clinton 

and a former Arkansas state 
trooper that Jones has alleged 
first told her that Clinton was 
interested in meeting her in 
the private hotel suite.

Bennett 
argued 
in 

September that letting Jones’ 
case proceed would set the 
precedent of exposing sitting 
Presidents 
to 
lawsuits 
by 

anyone who disagrees with 
their policies. In addition, 
Bennett has contended that 

the lawsuit would unfairly 
distract Clinton from the 
performance of his official 
duties - an argument often 
employed 
by 
government 

officials to avoid testifying in 
civil proceedings. But Davis, 
Jones’ attorney, has asserted 
that his client is due the same 
rights to a fair and speedy 
trial as anyone else - whoever 
the defendant is.

Bennett has two weeks to 

appeal the three-judge panel’s 
decision by asking the full 8th 
Circuit court to consider the 
matter.

2A — Wednesday, January 9, 2019
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
News

KATELYN MULCHAY/Daily

LSA junior Alexis Rankin stands in the tunnel entrance to the field at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium during the Peach Bowl in Atlanta, Georgia.

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