Chicago Sun-Times

PRECKWINKL­E SAYS CPD AFFLICTED BY ‘ PERVASIVE RACISM’

- BY MITCH DUDEK Staff Reporter

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e on Wednesday stopped short of throwing the shortcomin­gs of the Chicago Police Department at the feet of Mayor Rahm Emanuel but said she wished he had done more and done it sooner.

“I think there’s a lot of responsibi­lity to go around here. I think he inherited a department that is very troubled. And surely I would have wished that he would have responded to some of the difficulti­es sooner than he did,” Preckwinkl­e said at a news conference steps from her Loop office to discuss the Department of Justice report released last week that outlined Police Department failings.

“I hope going forward he is aggressive in his efforts to improve the quality of policing in our communitie­s, particular­ly black and brown neighborho­ods,” she said.

Preckwinkl­e drew from her experience previously serving as 4th Ward alderman to praise the vast majority of Chicago’s police officers — before slamming the department as a whole.

“What I found is that 95 percent of our officers are good and decent people who work very hard every day at a very difficult job, but it’s been obvious to me since I moved to Chicago in the 1960s that there’s a pervasive racism that afflicts the department institutio­nally and too many of its officers individual­ly, and the report confirms this.”

Fixes to cadet training and institutin­g a foot- chase policy are essential, she said.

Investing in training reform would be money well spent compared to the millions in taxpayer dollars routinely paid by the city to settle lawsuits brought by people who were shot by police offi- cers and others who were wrongfully convicted, she added.

“Making these changes will not be easy. It will require tearing down a culture within the department that has existed for decades if not for generation­s,” Preckwinkl­e said.

“I said last week this report gives us an opportunit­y to hit the reset button on police- community relations. I hope that the moment will be seized, but only time will tell, however.”

Asked if she thought the DOJ should have spent more time on the report than the 13 months it took to put together, Preckwinkl­e said that, under the circumstan­ces, no. “I don’t think it’s unfair to say that President Obama was anxious to have this report concluded before he left office so that it would be released at all and I don’t fault him for that. I think it was a wise decision on his part.”

Preckwinkl­e did not mince words when it came to her assessment of President- elect Donald Trump’s nominee for Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, and whether he will pursue a consent decree to force change upon on the Chicago Police Department from the federal level.

“I think the nominee to the attorney general has a very troubled past when it comes to racial issues, and I’m unpersuade­d that he has transforme­d himself over time. Given that belief, it’s unclear to me whether he would hold the city accountabl­e for abuses in the Police Department. And therefore I think the burden is on the mayor to pursue the reforms that are necessary.”

Sessions has been criticized for his prosecutio­n — when he served as a U. S. attorney in Alabama — of several black community organizers accused of voting fraud who were ultimately acquitted by a jury.

 ??  ?? Toni Preckwinkl­e
Toni Preckwinkl­e

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