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Black NYPD chiefs reflect on long road to high-ranking commands: ‘Standing on the shoulders of giants’

black-nypd-chiefs-reflect-on-long-road-to-high-ranking-commands:-‘standing-on-the-shoulders-of-giants’
Black NYPD chiefs reflect on long road to high-ranking commands: ‘Standing on the shoulders of giants’

They’re standing on the shoulders of giants.

Three NYPD chiefs talked to The Post about becoming some of the highest ranking black executives in the department Friday in honor of Black History Month. 

Bronx commander Chief Benjamin Gurley, Queens South commander Chief Christopher McIntosh and Manhattan North commander Chief Aaron Edwards all spoke of the challenges of becoming executive leaders in the country’s largest police department.

Three NYPD officers, Aaron Edwards, Benjamin Gurley, and Christopher Mcintosh, smiling and sitting at a conference table.

NYPD Chiefs Aaron Edwards, Benjamin Gurley and Christopher Mcintosh all run borrough commands in the city. J.C. Rice for NY Post

“Growing up in the Bronx we see blue and white cars driving around and we know that the precinct’s there, but nobody wants to go in one,” said Gurley, a 52-year-old father-of-three.

He found a mentor through his involvement with the Police Athletic League in the borough’s Hunt’s Point neighborhood and decided he wanted to join the city’s Finest.

But once he got on the job, the first-generation cop found there weren’t many executive officers who looked like him. 

“When I came on the job in 2000, the job looked very different,” Gurley said.  “I had some black executives that I saw, but not as many as I see now. And I never thought in a million years I would be sitting here as a two-star chief.” 

Getting promoted was difficult, he said, and it was discouraging to put in the work without getting the reward.

“If you were to put in hard work and see people pass you …you would kind of get discouraged and may not want to work as hard,” he said. “That has leveled off a lot over the past couple of years.”

Christopher Mcintosh smiling during an NYPD promotion ceremony.

Christopher McIntosh grew up in Jamaica, Queens, and immigrated to the US with his family when he was 9. J.C. Rice for NY Post

NYPD officer Bengamin Gurley in uniform.

Chief Benjamin Gurley grew up in the Bronx and now runs the borough command there. J.C. Rice for NY Post

Aaron Edwards in his NYPD uniform.

Chief Aaron Edwards is at the helm of the Manhattan North borrough command. J.C. Rice for NY Post

Chief Christopher McIntosh grew up on the island of Jamaica and immigrated to the US with his family when he was 9. Today, he runs all the patrols in Queens South that includes the Jamaica neighborhood. 

When he joined in 1998, he knew all the black executive officers, he said.

“It wasn’t that many,” McIntosh said. “From where we started to where we’re at, it’s a huge difference.”

One challenge was learning how to navigate the system, he said.

He did that by going to different leaders and asking them what they would do and following their advice when he thought it made sense.

Three police officers, Aaron Edwards, Benjamin Gurley, and Christopher McIntosh, at an NYPD promotion ceremony.

The three police officers have become some of the highest ranking black police officers at the NYPD. J.C. Rice for NY Post

“I’m standing on the shoulders of giants,” he said.

Chief Aaron Edwards started on the job in 2003, when the ranks of black police executives and begun to grow, he said.

“I was very blessed to come on when I did,” he said. “I had a lot of mentors so I always felt like the hard work was done before I started.” 

Seven of the NYPD’s 25 chiefs are black — nearly a third — under Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, which is more than ever before, an NYPD spokesman said.

He remembers a Black History Month event about 20 years ago at One Police Plaza where all the black executives photos were flashed on a giant movie screen .

“I can still picture that today, and I thought it was, so cool to see,” Edwards recalled.  “You know, it was maybe 15 or 16 black executives, either at their desks or commanding a roll call. And I just thought, ‘I’ll be on that screen one day.’ ”

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