Chicago Sun-Times

REBUILDING TRUST IN CASES OF POLICE- INVOLVED SHOOTINGS

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Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx has repeatedly stressed her commitment to rebuilding trust in her office, including in cases involving fatal police- involved shootings.

To further that agenda, Foxx on Thursday said her office will add another layer of profession­al accountabi­lity by calling in the state’s appellate prosecutor’s office to review any police shootings she declines to prosecute. She has drafted legislatio­n that would allow her to do so.

This adds a new set of eyes to potentiall­y controvers­ial cases. If the state prosecutor thinks Foxx’s office is wrong not to prosecute, that would be made public, and Foxx would recuse herself from further proceeding­s.

“The critical issue in fatal officer- involved shooting cases is how to conduct investigat­ions and make charging decisions in a manner that is viewed as credible and legitimate by the involved parties and the public,” Foxx said in a statement. Foxx is right about that, and her plan looks like progress. But let’s also be clear it is no perfect solution. The state’s appellate prosecutor’s office, which now handles only cases outside Cook County, has its own critics. They say the state office is not the answer to avoiding prosecutor­ial complicity in police misconduct.

Bill Clutter, director of investigat­ions for the Springfiel­d- based Investigat­ing Innocence, for example, says the agency “has a lousy track record” on that score.

Foxx deserves credit for proposing more trustworth­y procedures, but the best safeguard against miscarriag­es of justice remains officials at every level — from cops to prosecutor­s to judges — who do their job without fear or favor. Follow the Editorial Board on Twitter: @ csteditori­als. Send letters to letters@ suntimes. com.

 ??  ?? Kim Foxx ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES
Kim Foxx ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES

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