There's still no police commissioner.
It seemed like Sophie was going to run.
The second she said she quit the Crows, I believed she was going to announce that (or once the Big Bad eventually falls). So far, she's in career limbo, but considering what she said about the importance of having a black presence in law enforcement, her next step should be trying to be that representative on the GCPD--and fight to clean it up, and possibly act as contrast to the way the Crows do business (which will create some conflict with Jacob).
I'm sure that's largely true, but I resist blanket generalizations about any category of human beings. No matter what you can say about the majority of a group, there are always some people out at the far ends of the bell curve.
The episode's writers, Ebony Gilbert and Maya Houston, are both black women, so it stands to reason that they have black men in their lives. Maybe some of the men they know occupy a different part of the bell curve than the ones you know.
Sigh. The black community across America is one I'm very familiar with for obvious reasons, and its "members" hail from from all walks of life, but one of the central commonalities we share is our relationship to the criminal justice system and reaction to it, and none would have behaved like Luke. Luke's status / background should not have blinded him to those realities. Hell, I'm in a high tax bracket, yet there's no point in my life where that prevented me from being aware of the "black protocol" in facing law enforcement (and sure as Hell did not stop them from harassing me). This episode's writers needed Luke to be that black male victim of police brutality, but there's other ways he could have ended up in the same situation, instead of one that made him seem utterly ignorant of the relationship black men have with law enforcement. Its an inescapable reality across America.