Hillary Clinton tried to walk a fine line between her usual pandering to the Black Lives Matter movement while also seeming to recognize her anti-police rhetoric went a bridge too far on Tuesday.

Speaking at a rally in Orlando Wednesday, Clinton tried to address the fact that Charlotte, North Carolina, was still smoldering from the night before because of a riot related to a police shooting on Tuesday night.

“[The Clinton campaign] didn’t care. Their attitude, then, back in July, during the DNC, was they were going to win this thing anyway, so who cares?”

On that night, in University City, police shot and killed Keith Lamont Scott, 43.

And Tulsa, Oklahoma, was also grappling with a deadly police shooting. Terence Crutcher was shot and killed by police on Friday night. ABC News reported Crutcher was unarmed.

Both men were black.

Clinton referenced the two similar incidents, starting with her usual implication that police were wrong in both incidents before full details have emerged.

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“There is still much we don’t know about what happened in both incidents,” said Clinton. “But we do know that we have two more names to add to a list of African-Americans killed by police officers in these encounters. It’s unbearable and it needs to become intolerable.”

But then Clinton tried a new twist: speaking positively about police officers.

“We also saw the targeting of police officers in Philadelphia last week,” Clinton said. “And last night in Charlotte, 12 officers were injured in demonstrations following Keith Lamont Scott’s death.” The actual number of injured officers is up to 16.

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“Every day, police officers across our country are serving with extraordinary courage, honor and skill. We saw that again this weekend in New York, New Jersey, and Minnesota,” said Clinton. “Our police handled those terrorist attacks exactly right, and they likely saved a lot of lives.”

Clinton then said she spoke to many police leaders who agree with her on “reform,” and rebuilding trust between communities and police.

Clinton’s sudden appreciation for the police could be owed in part to outrage over a tweet she personally sent out late Tuesday night.

“Another unarmed Black man was shot in a police incident. This should be intolerable. We have so much work to do. #TerenceCrutcher -H,” tweeted Clinton, with the “H” to designate it was indeed her personally sending the tweet.

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Though Clinton was talking about the shooting in Tulsa, Oklahoma, her inflammatory weigh-in no doubt helped incite the violent riots that left 16 police injured in Charlotte.

Clinton has been trying to keep members of Black Lives Matter close to her campaign. A number of mothers of black men killed by police spoke at the Democratic National Convention.

As she did after the Tulsa and Charlotte incidents, Clinton has often blasted out tweets immediately following nationally reported police shootings of black men, long before investigations have concluded or full details have emerged.

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Clinton’s pandering to BLM has offended police. The Fraternal Order of Police issued their national endorsement to Donald Trump, Republican presidential candidate, on Sept. 16.

Not long after, John McNesby, the president of the Philadelphia FOP, told a local radio host that Clinton blew the police off when they asked her to interview for the endorsement.

“[The Clinton campaign] didn’t care,” said McNesby. “Their attitude, then, back in July, during the DNC, was they were going to win this thing anyway, so who cares? Now, I think the tides have turned a little bit and she’s on her heels. As many times as we’ve tried to … have it be a fair process and an open process, the emails back were that they’re not interested and no thanks.”

Before any final reports were issued, Clinton also labeled the police shooting in Tulsa part of “systemic racism” and “implicit bias.” She made the comments on “The Steve Harvey Morning Show” on Tuesday, and promised to talk to “white people” and tell them “this is not who we are.”

Clinton may now be realizing she has gone a bridge too far with her BLM pandering. On Wednesday, with some polls showing Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in the lead, Clinton showed an interest in praising the police — maybe a little too late.