Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

We must do better in memory of Adam

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Nothing we do or say or write or advocate will bring back Adam Toledo, a 13-year-old kid shot by a Chicago police officer on March 29. Our agony, our tears, our careful study of the videos released Thursday won’t bring him back.

He is a boy running from police in the middle of the night, wearing jeans and a sweatshirt and a baseball cap, his feet pounding the pavement as he outpaces the officer in a Little Village alley. He stops near a fence. He turns toward the officer and a shot rings out. He crumples to the ground, blood on his face and hands, as panicked voices soon surround him, his body still and unmoving. The officer begs him to stay awake, to stay alert as the paramedics descend.

He cannot.

The split-second movements of the officer, of Adam, will be carefully scrutinize­d as the case moves through the investigat­ion phase, and as the officer moves through the police conduct review process. Moments, seconds, will be analyzed. Witnesses will be called. Experts will be heard. All of that will be important in gaining a fuller understand­ing of what happened and why.

But it won’t bring Adam back. And those analyses, while important, should not override the excruciati­ng theme woven into this case and so many others: that police respond to calls in Black and brown communitie­s more aggressive­ly, more callously, than in white communitie­s. That the often amped-up police response is not commensura­te with the situation at hand. That interactio­ns are gruff and hostile. And that the de-escalation techniques reform groups have long advocated never seem to get implemente­d.

And so residents in minority communitie­s are more fearful of police. Less willing to cooperate. More likely to run. Like Adam.

It’s pure agony to watch it happen over and over.

Until the Chicago Police Department and others across the country commit to restoring a sense of basic fairness in how they respond to each and every traffic stop, search warrant, domestic dispute, shots fired — call for help — until they can demonstrat­e a sense of fairness, without double standards, this city and others are likely to see more cases like Adam’s.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and others this week urged the public to let the process play out and allow the investigat­ive bodies to do their work. “Reserve judgment,” she said Thursday. “We don’t have enough informatio­n to be the judge and jury” in this case.

“Let’s wait until we hear all the facts,” she said.

As we wait, the trial of Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd is unfolding in Minneapoli­s. The second-degree manslaught­er charge filed against former officer Kim Potter, accused of shooting Daunte Wright during a traffic stop in a Minneapoli­s suburb, is unfolding. And we have Adam here in Chicago, reminding us of the work that has not been done. We’ve been here before and we should not be here again.

The consent decree from the U.S. Department of Justice that outlines steps the Police Department needs to take to rebuild trust and to better serve the public cannot continue to be shoved to the back burner of City Hall’s priorities. Get going.

“We have to do better,” Lightfoot said.

We must.

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