Detroit's new mayor sworn in, says `time for hope'

By ED WHITE, Associated Press Writer 9 minutes ago

Ken Cockrel Jr. was sworn in as the city's new mayor Friday, vaulted into
office by a sex scandal that destroyed the reign of Kwame Kilpatrick and
threw Detroit's government into chaos for months.

The 42-year-old Democrat officially became the city's chief executive at
12:01 a.m. Friday, promoted from president of the City Council to replace
the disgraced Kilpatrick. He was sworn in by a federal appeals court judge
during a special midmorning ceremony at the downtown municipal center.

Cockrel recited the oath of office, then spoke about leaving behind the
Kilpatrick sex-and-text scandal and charting a new course for the nation's
11th-largest city.

"This is our time for hope and also for renewal," Cockrel said. "It's our
time to breathe life back into the city."

Cockrel, a former newspaper reporter, has hired a former federal prosecutor
as deputy mayor, picked a police chief and urged residents to put their
trust in the new team at City Hall. He also said getting his hands on the
city's budget problems is a priority and already has met with outside
auditors.

"From this moment on, the past is the past," Cockrel said after the
ceremony. "Because of the events of the past several months, it's critical
that we find closure, mend our wounds, treat our bumps and our bruises and
heal as a city."

Kilpatrick, also a Democrat, left office Thursday and will go to jail next
month as part of a recent plea deal with prosecutors. He admitted lying on
the witness stand in a lawsuit over the firing of two police officers.
Kilpatrick's 120-day jail sentence starts Oct. 28.

His problems began in January when the Detroit Free Press published red-hot
text messages between Kilpatrick and top aide Christine Beatty, which
contradicted courtroom denials of an extramarital affair and led to charges
of perjury and obstruction of justice.

Separately, the City Council said it didn't know that an $8.4-million
settlement with three former officers last year included a side deal to keep
a lid on the lusty messages.

Beatty is charged with perjury and obstruction of justice. She refused to
accept a plea deal with prosecutors this week that would have given her 60
days in jail. Her trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 5.

Kilpatrick's term runs through 2009. The winner of a nonpartisan special
election May 5 will fill the balance of the term. A primary election to trim
the field to two candidates will be held Feb. 24.

Businessman and ex-Detroit Pistons star Dave Bing told the Detroit Free
Press that he intends to run for mayor in the election. An aide told The
Associated Press Bing won't comment.

Bing, 64, said the city needs a mayor "with a clean, fresh outlook." He
played for the Pistons from 1966 to 1975 and has run The Bing Group for 28
years.

___

On the Net:

City: http://www.ci.detroit.mi.us


-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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