Mostly.
In his longest and most-detailed remarks to date on the Sept. 1-4 event, Harrington acknowledged to the City Council, and the media afterward, that some things didn't work so well.
He said "absolutely" innocent people were swept up along with suspected anarchists planning vandalism.
"We tried very diligently to sort out the folks caught up in the marches," he said. "Some were truly innocent. ... We tried to release them as soon as possible."
Mass arrests are just one of a number of police tactics being questioned in the wake of the convention, which saw 818 arrests, tear gassings, vandalism and thousands of peaceful marchers.
Harrington's presentation before the City Council on Wednesday was an early look, he said, into a police "after-action report" being prepared by the department.
Harrington said for the first time Wednesday that the police internal affairs division will look into individual allegations of police misconduct -- even if it doesn't receive a formal complaint. The department has received only one formal complaint despite dozens of people who have said they were -- or were seen on film -- being subjected to police force.
Harrington's commitment to, for example, review police and media videos with a specific eye for officer conduct came after Council Member Melvin Carter III pressed him on the issue.
After the presentation, Carter, who has been among several elected officials to raise questions about police actions during the RNC, said he appreciated the commitment.
"I think it is important to understand the police perspective on what happened," Carter said.
Guided by a slideshow summarizing each day's intelligence and what actually happened, Harrington painted a picture of a department forced to change its tactics and ramp up its use of force as "anarchists and rioters" sought to disrupt the convention and damage property.
Among the new information Harrington provided:
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