'Let's walk': Genesee County Sheriff removes riot gear, joins protesters in march

Meredith Spelbring
Detroit Free Press

A single fist bump started a movement in Flint Township on Saturday.

A video of Genesee County Sheriff Christopher Swanson removing his riot gear and walking with Flint protesters went viral Saturday.

"We want to be with y'all for real so I took the helmet off and laid the batons down," Swanson can be heard saying in video. "I want to make this a parade, not a protest."

Swanson said his office could see a mob of protesters moving gradually toward the Genesee County Sheriff's Office when they began to suit up in riot gear, unsure of the temperament of the crowd they were about to face.

Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson high fives a woman who called his name as he marches with protestors of police brutality and in memory of George Floyd on Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Flint Township. Protestors marched along Miller Rd. In Flint Township before ending up at the Flint Township Police Department Headquarters where they were met by police in riot gear. Swanson deescalated the situation by asking one of the protesters what he wanted of them. They replied to walk with us and so he did with some of his deputies. 
"We're on the community's side. Al we had to do was talk to them and now we're walking with them. Everybody wins. The cops in this community, we condemn what happened. That guy's not one of us. You have police officers here that do it everyday for the right reasons. We're asking people just to trust the police. Trust us tonight we're walking with you. We prove it by our actions," Swanson said. "When I look at that all the good we do in the community across the nation can be destroyed in on act. We were the heroes a week ago so we're going to get back on the hero platform and treat people right. Give people a voice."

As a collection of law enforcement agencies from the Flint area went out near Flint Township, Swanson said he saw a Flint Township officer reach out and fist bump with someone in the march.

At that point, the sheriff said, he knew there was still room for communication between the public and law enforcement. Swanson removed his riot gear, going against almost all of his training, and approached one of the leaders of the movement.

"And I said, 'What else do I need to do?' and he said, 'Walk with us.' The best moment of my police career is when I said, 'Let's walk.' And we walked over a mile back to where it started and I could feel an instantaneous peace on both sides," Swanson said. "That would not have happened if they had not wanted to listen to what I had to say as well, so it is mutually agreed upon that I need to hear what they are saying."

Hundreds of protesters in cars and on foot began moving down Miller Road on Saturday in Flint Township as part of a nationwide response to the killing of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer.

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Swanson said the 8-minute, 46-second video showing Floyd struggling to breathe as officer Derek Chauvin kept his knee on Floyd's neck during an arrest undoes decades of good police work in an instant. Swanson told the crowd Chauvin "is not one of us."

"Because I believe it, he is not one of us, you can't justify that kind of nonsense," Swanson said.

Protests across the country have gone from peaceful, organized events to violent and chaotic as night sets in. Back to back nights in Detroit descended into chaos, leading to a total of 144 arrests over the course of roughly 24 hours.

Johnie Franklin of Flint Township, Mich., takes a selfie with Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson on May 30. Protesters at the Police Department were met by police in riot gear. Swanson asked one of the protesters what he wanted. The protester asked Swanson to walk with them, so he and some of his deputies did. 
"We're on the community's side," Swanson says. "All we had to do was talk to them, and now we're walking with them. Everybody wins."

Swanson said going into a hostile crowd with no gear and no indication of how he was going to be received went against tactical training and was fear inducing. Yet it was a step that needed to be taken.

Now, Swanson is calling on other officers and agencies nationwide to do the same.

"Police leadership needs to take action on breaking down the first barrier," he said. "Police leadership, if they're not doing it already, come from behind your podiums, come from outside the conference rooms and the incident command centers, talk to the people. That is the difference. People that have something to say when nobody listens continues to be enraged and we are not going to fix the divide overnight, but you can see what happened instantaneously."

Meredith Spelbring is a news intern with the Detroit Free Press. Reach her at mspelbring@freepress.com or on Twitter @mere0415.