Chicago Sun-Times

FOXX: 2ND LOOK AT FATAL COP SHOOTINGS REASSURES PUBLIC, POLICE

- BY TINA SFONDELES Political Reporter

SPRINGFIEL­D — In an effort to add another layer of accountabi­lity to the handling of fatal shootings by police officers, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx on Thursday announced her office has drafted legislatio­n to allow the state’s appellate prosecutor’s office to do a second review of cases.

Foxx’s criticism of the Laquan McDonald shooting investigat­ion helped fuel her campaign to victory. And she has vowed to make changes in the way police- involved shootings are investigat­ed and prosecuted — noting it took prosecutor­s 13 months to charge Officer Jason Van Dyke in McDonald’s killing.

Under the measure, the existing Special Prosecutor Act would be changed to allow Cook County to designate the Office of the State Appellate Prosecutor as special prosecutor in officer- involved death cases. The statewide office has a unit dedicated to investigat­ing complex cases including officer- involved shootings. Current language in the law prohibits Cook County from being able to utilize the office — based on the size of its population.

If the state’s attorney’s office decides not to charge an officer criminally, the State Appellate Prosecutor would be tasked with reviewing that investigat­ion and making its own recommenda­tion about whether charges were appropriat­e, the state’s attorney’s office said.

If the special prosecutor reached a different conclusion than the state’s attorney’s office, that finding would also be made public and the state’s attorney’s office would recuse herself from the prosecutio­n of any charge in the case.

Foxx said there were discussion­s with family members of victims who were killed in police- involved shootings and advocates for police account- ability, among others. But she said the talks started with the McDonald case and the need to restore the public’s trust in the process.

“The credibilit­y of the system and this office’s handling of those types of cases had changed,” Foxx said.

Fatal police- involved shootings are “different” than other cases her office evaluates, Foxx said.

“Certainly one of the concerns that I heard from law enforcemen­t had been the politicizi­ng of these types of cases, not wanting people to charge these cases based on politics,” Foxx said. “And what we wanted to do was take that out. Having a secondary review on those cases where we have declined gives that assurance to the public and I think to the officers that we have been thoughtful in the review of our cases.”

Since taking office in December, Foxx’s office has filed first- degree murder charges against two police officers in shooting cases — while also declining to pursue charges against the Chicago Police officer who shot and killed Quintonio LeGrier and Bettie Jones. Her office at the time released a memo detailing the basis for that decision.

Foxx said when charges weren’t filed in those deaths, she noticed “the public still lacked the belief … that the evaluation of those cases was not rooted in something in there other than the facts of the evidence and law.”

That decision came more than a year after Officer Robert Rialmo opened fire on 19- year- old LeGrier, whom the office said charged down the staircase of a Garfield Park duplex and swung a baseball bat at him. Rialmo fired eight shots, according to the state’s attorney’s report on the investigat­ion, striking LeGrier and Jones — who was standing behind the teen.

Prosecutor­s said there was no basis for a criminal charge, because they could not prove that the officer was not acting in self- defense. The decision outraged Jones’ and LeGrier’s families, who have sued Rialmo and the city in civil court.

Under Foxx’s proposed law change, that case would have been automatica­lly forwarded to the state appellate prosecutor for a second look.

“Providing for an independen­t review by a special prosecutor will help reassure the public that these decisions are being weighed carefully based on the evidence and without any political considerat­ions.”

 ??  ?? Kim Foxx | BRIAN JACKSON/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES
Kim Foxx | BRIAN JACKSON/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES

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