New York mayor calls for pause in protests after police killings

By Jonathan Allen and Laila Kearney NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York Mayor Bill de Blasio sought to ease tensions with the city's police force on Monday, calling for a suspension of protests against the use of excessive force until after the funerals of two officers shot dead in an ambush. De Blasio, a Democrat who has come under intense criticism from some police unions for his handling of protests over police killings of unarmed black men, asked the city to stand by families of the officers who were killed Saturday in Brooklyn. "It's a time for everyone to put aside political debates, put aside protests, put aside all of the things we will talk about in due time," de Blasio said in a speech to a charity with close ties to the New York Police Department. "Let's comfort these families, let's see them through these funerals. Then debate can begin again." Police Commissioner William Bratton said the heads of the city's five police unions had agreed to suspend any lobbying efforts tied to the protests until after both officers, Rafael Ramos, 40, and his partner, Wenjian Liu, 28, are buried. "We can then continue the dialogue that has begun over issues and differences that exist," Bratton told reporters. But Reverend Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist representing the families of Eric Garner, killed by police in New York, and Michael Brown, killed by police in Ferguson, Missouri, said de Blasio's call for a suspension of protests was too nebulous to heed. "Is a vigil a protest? Is a rally?" Sharpton said in a telephone interview, calling de Blasio's comments "an ill-defined request." Sharpton, who has denounced the slaying of the officers as they sat in their patrol car, said he would not change planned prayer vigils at the scene of Garner's death and elsewhere in the city over the coming days to mark the family's first Christmas without him. De Blasio had sympathized with protesters who took to the streets after grand juries declined in the last few weeks to charge white officers in the deaths of Brown and Garner. De Blasio was elected last year on a promise to advance civil rights after two decades of his predecessors emphasizing law and order policies that helped the most-populous city in the United States shed its reputation for violent crime. De Blasio's tensions with some unions in the nearly 35,000-member NYPD is the biggest crisis of his young mayoralty. Investigators said they had recovered one photo of the gunman, identified as Ismaaiyl Brinsley, attending a protest against excessive police force at New York's Union Square Park. They said Brinsley, who was black, made "anti-police" comments online. Brinsley committed suicide after shooting the two police officers. Since the attack, the NYPD has received several "copycat kind of threats," Bratton said, though none have been substantiated. "He acted alone," Bratton said. "Nothing in the investigation up to this point would lead us to believe that he was anything but a sole operator." BACKS TURNED Several police officers turned their backs on de Blasio in protest when he arrived at the Brooklyn hospital where the two officers were taken after they were shot. The police union said the mayor had blood on his hands. Bratton earlier told NBC's "Today" show that he considered it inappropriate for police officers to turn their backs on the mayor. He said labor talks and pension concerns were fueling their discontent. But, in a press conference with Bratton, de Blasio said the attack should not be tied to the recent protests, which in New York have been largely peaceful. "You have people who are trying to work for a more fair society. Anyone who does that non-violently, I respect that. I respect our men and women in uniform. Those are not contradictory thoughts," de Blasio said. De Blasio and Bratton earlier on Monday visited the families of both men. Bratton said Ramos' funeral would be on Saturday. Liu's funeral has not yet been scheduled. The grand juries that investigated the killings of Brown and Garner found that the police officers involved broke no laws. On Monday, a Milwaukee prosecutor said that a police officer would not be charged for the April fatal shooting of a black man. The officer in the Milwaukee shooting, who like the officers in Ferguson and New York incident was white, was fired in October for failing to follow police procedure. (Additional reporting by Sebastien Malo in New York, Bill Trott, Susan Heavey and Ian Simpson in Washington and Richard Weizel in Milford, Connecticut; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Howard Goller and Grant McCool)