In the op-ed, Jenkins touched on transparency, accountability and someone who can stand up to the police union saying, "Whether, through violence or racist Facebook postings, the police union is there to defend bad behavior. We need a commissioner who isn't in lockstep with the union and who will instead push back when the union tries to hide and justify bad behavior."
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"In that one section, he talks about hiding discipline and bad cops. We don't do that," said McNesby. "We have no idea what investigation is going on until the police department is done with it."
McNesby said there's always room for improvement, but feels Jenkins should fall back.
"I just wish he would stay out of it," McNesby added.
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Action News caught up with Jenkins on Wednesday, but he wouldn't talk about McNesby directly, but just that the war of words are "a distraction from the issues and topics at hand."
"You know, we're talking about trying to make our community safer we're trying to work together to make our community safer. And when you have this rhetoric that comes from either side-- what it does is people begin to cover who's fighting, who's talking about what, which is why I never respond to those things. I want to keep it about you know the topic at hand. I want people to start discussing, you know, what they want to see out of the next police commissioner, what they want to see out of their in police department how we want to clean up the streets and stop, you know, these senseless murders together."
Jenkins says he wants to keep focusing on the issues.