Oh, I don't think that anyone lied, either. But I do think that Sgt Crowley should have been more accurate in his report- it might make someone (me!) think that there were other minor errors in the report.
I've been on both sides of the police equation- my former husband was a noble policeman who was on the scene during the terrible Texas Tower slaughter in 1966, and my current husband was (falsely) accused of attacking a 6'4" cop during an anti-war demonstration back in the 60's. My hubby is the mildest and gentlest of men, and he was a 5'3" 105 pound teenaged vegetarian wearing earth shoes when he "attacked" the poor tactical policeman that day in Boston! The charges were dropped as soon as the judge saw hubby and the cop standing next to one another. BTW, I've fattened him up a bit since then, and also, BTW, he wasn't a teenager when I married him!
What I do know is that even good cops make mistakes. I assume that Crowley is a good cop, but he did make a mistake. He knew that according to Mass law (the Mulvey case*) that you can't be disorderly by yelling with only a cop or cops for witnesses. So he encouraged Gates to come onto the porch and then he arrested him. Why, if technically legal, was that a mistake? Because the next time he has occasion to defuse a situation that is truly dangerous, he may hesitate. Or if it comes to court, his reputation may be a bit sullied. He allowed his ego to take control of the situation, and now it is
his judgment that will be questioned.
As for Professor Gates, no doubt he was furious and mortified to be handcuffed in front of his neighbors- and a lesser man would probably bring suit. But he's famous, respected, brilliant (they don't give those MacArthur Genius awards to slackers), and he now has more street cred with many people than he did before. Plus, he has made a lot of people talk about a subject that many of us have ignored for a long time.
Crowley is the loser in this situation, and he has no one to blame but himself.
It's not a good thing when a policeman makes himself look bad- it hurts other officers in the long run.
*
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=ma&vol=appslip/appMar03i&invol=1
Use this:
http://tinyurl.com/ntgmah
"...behavior that has an impact only upon members of the police force is significantly different from that affecting other citizens in at least two respects: it is an unfortunate but inherent part of a police officer's job to be in the presence of distraught individuals; and, to the extent that the theory behind criminalizing disorderly conduct rests on the tendency of the actor's conduct to provoke violence in others, "one must suppose that [police officers], employed and trained to maintain order, would be least likely to be provoked to disorderly responses..."