Chicago Sun-Times

EXIT SIGNS

City’s No. 2 cop, First Deputy Supt. John Escalante, takes top police post at Northeaste­rn Illinois U. as CPD braces for more fallout from shooting of Laquan McDonald

- BY FRANK MAIN AND FRAN SPIELMAN Staff Reporters

The No. 2 official in the Chicago Police Department announced his retirement Tuesday to become police chief at Northeaste­rn Illinois University as the department braces for more fallout from the Laquan McDonald scandal.

First Deputy Supt. John Escalante was chief of detectives in 2014 when a department investigat­ion found Officer Jason Van Dyke was justified in fatally shooting Laquan McDonald 16 times.

Then on Nov. 24, Van Dyke was charged with murder following a separate investigat­ion by the Cook County state’s attorney’s office and the FBI.

Video from a dashboard camera in one of the police cars on the scene contradict­ed the accounts of Van Dyke and other officers, showing McDonald was walking away from Van Dyke and not approachin­g him as he held a knife.

On Monday, the Chicago SunTimes reported Police Supt. Eddie Johnson is considerin­g recommenda­tions by the city’s inspector general to fire or discipline at least 10 officers for either covering up or bungling the investigat­ion of the McDonald shooting.

Deputy Chief David McNaughton has retired ahead of the public release of the inspector general’s recommenda­tions. He had signed off on Van Dyke’s use of force being proper, writing that McDonald had “continued to approach” Van Dyke, even though the video showed the opposite.

Escalante does not come under criticism in the inspector general’s report, according to a police source.

Escalante, who served as interim superinten­dent for about four months after former Supt. Garry McCarthy’s ouster in December 2015, recently marked 30 years with the department. His last city patrol will be over Labor Day weekend before starting at the Northwest Side university on Sept. 7.

“As police superinten­dent and a resident of Chicago, I have bitterswee­t emotions on John’s decision to accept this incredible opportunit­y as our Police Department will lose a very dedicated and intelligen­t crime fighter who cares deeply about the people and safety of our city,” Johnson said in a statement.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel was tightlippe­d Tuesday about the inspector general report and its connection to Escalante’s departure. Emanuel met with Inspector General Joe Ferguson last month, but it’s unclear whether they discussed the McDonald case.

“I won’t really have much to say about the particular issue until Eddie [ Johnson] makes his decision. He’ll make that decision, and I’ll back that decision up,” Emanuel said.

On Tuesday, Ald. Danny Solis ( 25th), Emanuel’s staunchest City Council supporter in the Hispanic community, demanded that another Hispanic replace Escalante.

“City department­s, as much as possible, should reflect what the compositio­n of the city is with qualified people,” Solis said, citing a shortage of Hispanics in leadership positions in city government.

“They should find the best qualified Hispanic and try to get that representa­tion within the police force.”

Escalante held down the fort as interim superinten­dent after the firing of Supt. Garry McCarthy, and he applied for the permanent job, only to be bypassed by the Police Board.

Emanuel ended up rejecting all three finalists and doing an end- run around the Police Board by choosing Johnson, who did not apply for the job.

At a City Hall news conference on Dec. 7, Escalante addressed reporters’ questions about whether officers tailored their reports to match the story told by Van Dyke.

Escalante, chief of detectives at the time those reports were approved, was asked why they were approved when the video clearly contradict­s the officers’ accounts.

“There is no formal review process that goes up the chain of command for a police- involved shooting. So we, as of today, instituted what is going to be a more formalized process that will review each police shooting that will actually come up the chain,” Escalante said then.

“Without trying to pass the buck, there actually was never anything for me to sign off on. But we’re changing that so that there will be as we move forward.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES FILE ??
ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES FILE
 ?? RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? First Deputy Supt. John Escalante served as CPD’s interim superinten­dent for about four months after former top cop Garry McCarthy was ousted in December.
RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES First Deputy Supt. John Escalante served as CPD’s interim superinten­dent for about four months after former top cop Garry McCarthy was ousted in December.

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