MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson met with Spectrum News 1 Reporter Ryan Burk for a one-on-one interview in light of Thursday night's shooting that injured two Milwaukee police officers.
Both of them were still in the hospital as of Friday evening, and one of them was in critical condition.
Johnson said he is praying for the two injured officers and wanted people to remember that they, too, are human beings.
He said he's been in contact with police and other city staff members about the situation.
Johnson said there's a common pattern in violent incidents like this.
"The most common pattern that I happen to see in this is there are so many people who should not have their hands on guns," Johnson said. "And I want to repeat that because that's very very important: People who shouldn't have their hands on guns, who have criminal records and the like, and too easy access to a large quantity of guns.
"Those things intersect. Folks get their hands on those guns who shouldn't have them and they cause chaos in the community," he continued. "They cause death, harm and destruction in our community. That is, by and away, the most contributing factors to what we see playing out in streets, not just in Milwaukee, but in places all over the country."
He said he wants the community to do their part in improving public safety.
"We don't control gun law at the local level. That's a state-level responsibility. It's a federal-level responsibility. And I want for police officers and folks in our community generally to know, who are also concerned about public safety, that they should also be looking to the state," Johnson said.
"They should be looking to the state; they should be looking to the federal government to say, 'What are you actually doing to make the job of policing safer in Milwaukee and communities across our country?' I don't think that question gets asked enough and that's where the true power lies."
Watch the full interview above.
Aly Prouty - Digital Media Producer
Aly Prouty is a digital producer for Spectrum News 1 Wisconsin, Ohio and Kentucky. An award-winning, multimedia journalist, she holds an honors B.A. in journalism from Marquette University and an M.A. in journalism and media studies from The University of Alabama.