Chicago Sun-Times

4 COPS AT MCDONALD SHOOTING SUSPENDED FOR FAULTY DASHCAMS

- BY SAM CHARLES Staff Reporter

Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson has suspended four officers who were at the scene of the Laquan McDonald shooting in 2014 for not ensuring their dashboard cameras were working properly.

In a quarterly report released Wednesday, the Office of Chicago’s Inspector General said it “issued findings and disciplina­ry recommenda­tions of suspension for four other officers, on the basis of which the Superinten­dent issued one- week suspension­s for each of the four individual­s.”

Chicago Police Department spokesman Anthony Guglielmi confirmed Johnson had suspended the four officers — who were not named — for one week each as punishment for not ensuring their dashboard cameras were working properly on Oct. 20, 2014, when McDonald was shot 16 times by Police Officer Jason Van Dyke.

Van Dyke has since been charged with murder, has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.

It was not known Wednesday night when the four cops were to serve their suspension­s — or specifical­ly how the cameras malfunctio­ned.

Five dashboard videos taken from different angles at the scene of the McDonald shooting have been released.

None recorded any audio, including the graphic video that shows Van Dyke shooting the 17- year- old as he walked away from police while holding a knife.

Inspector General Joseph Ferguson’s office initially recommende­d discipline for 11 officers involved in the McDonald case. In November, it recommende­d discipline of the four additional officers.

Based on those 15 recommenda­tions, Johnson moved to fire five of those cops, including Van Dyke. Their cases are pending before the Chicago Police Board.

Not all those recommende­d for discipline by the inspector general were formally punished.

In a Dec. 8, 2016, lawsuit, Ferguson wrote, “The Superinten­dent disagreed with OIG’s findings and disciplina­ry recommenda­tion respecting one officer and permitted five of 15 to resign or retire prior to formal action on OIG’s findings and discharge recommenda­tions.”

 ??  ?? In October 2014, 17- year- old Laquan McDonald was shot and killed by a Chicago Police Officer.
| FILE
In October 2014, 17- year- old Laquan McDonald was shot and killed by a Chicago Police Officer. | FILE

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