A Flashpoint in a Melting Pot: The Crown Heights Riots, A Watershed for New York City

Author(s): Brendan Finn

Edition: 1

Copyright: 2012

Pages: 170

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$32.36

ISBN 9781465222329

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  • The Big Apple was a city in decay for over thirty years. Machine politics had failed the constituency, as crime soared and the quality of life deteriorated. The social fabric was fraying in a politicized climate of heightened racial and ethnic tension.
  • Crown Heights, Brooklyn was a microcosm of New York City’s problem. Decades of mismanagement and political favoritism had divided the community, as animosity seethed below the surface. 
  • The politics of confrontation were playing out in the media and on the street. Demagogues were fanning the flames of hatred and resentment, turning two underdog groups against each other. The melting pot was starting to boil over.
  • A freak accident resulted in an explosion of hate and violence. The riot was a primal scream from a group that demanded change, and the NYPD became the scapegoat for all the problems. But change was on the way, and the first step was the realization that government had failed the people. Regime change was that first step on the road to recovery.


A Flashpoint in a Melting Pot is the story of Crown Heights, of Brooklyn and New York City. It is the story of two groups who had endured prejudice and oppression. Formerly allies, they found themselves fighting in the streets of Brooklyn with the police, as usual, caught in the middle. But the riot brought some momentous changes, and the NYPD would be instrumental in those changes. Ironically, the Crown Heights Riot was a watershed for New York City.

Brendan Finn

A review from Professor Timothy Horohoe, John Jay College of Criminal Justice:

"It is an interesting read, moves quickly and has a terrific amount of NYC history that leads up to the Crown Heights riots.

Brendan Finn does a great job; any cop will appreciate his portrayal of the situations and their outcomes. Good police bosses are given credit for making tough decisions, those politicians and police brass who failed to lead are also taken to task.

Finn offers unvarnished observations of the power struggle between the blacks and Hasidim in Crown Heights and some insightful chapters covering how the clubhouse politicians actually made race relations worse in an effort to harness the voting blocs.

Brooklyn cops, past and present, will read the book and see the conflict as timeless.

Any student of NYC political history will be engrossed in the story. A well done piece of modern history."
 

  • The Big Apple was a city in decay for over thirty years. Machine politics had failed the constituency, as crime soared and the quality of life deteriorated. The social fabric was fraying in a politicized climate of heightened racial and ethnic tension.
  • Crown Heights, Brooklyn was a microcosm of New York City’s problem. Decades of mismanagement and political favoritism had divided the community, as animosity seethed below the surface. 
  • The politics of confrontation were playing out in the media and on the street. Demagogues were fanning the flames of hatred and resentment, turning two underdog groups against each other. The melting pot was starting to boil over.
  • A freak accident resulted in an explosion of hate and violence. The riot was a primal scream from a group that demanded change, and the NYPD became the scapegoat for all the problems. But change was on the way, and the first step was the realization that government had failed the people. Regime change was that first step on the road to recovery.


A Flashpoint in a Melting Pot is the story of Crown Heights, of Brooklyn and New York City. It is the story of two groups who had endured prejudice and oppression. Formerly allies, they found themselves fighting in the streets of Brooklyn with the police, as usual, caught in the middle. But the riot brought some momentous changes, and the NYPD would be instrumental in those changes. Ironically, the Crown Heights Riot was a watershed for New York City.

Brendan Finn

A review from Professor Timothy Horohoe, John Jay College of Criminal Justice:

"It is an interesting read, moves quickly and has a terrific amount of NYC history that leads up to the Crown Heights riots.

Brendan Finn does a great job; any cop will appreciate his portrayal of the situations and their outcomes. Good police bosses are given credit for making tough decisions, those politicians and police brass who failed to lead are also taken to task.

Finn offers unvarnished observations of the power struggle between the blacks and Hasidim in Crown Heights and some insightful chapters covering how the clubhouse politicians actually made race relations worse in an effort to harness the voting blocs.

Brooklyn cops, past and present, will read the book and see the conflict as timeless.

Any student of NYC political history will be engrossed in the story. A well done piece of modern history."