Chicago Sun-Times

‘ THIS CAN WORK’

Ex- CPD deputy superinten­dent says independen­t police reform monitor can be ‘ as good’ as court oversight

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

An independen­t monitor overseeing Chicago Police reform can be “as good” as court oversight, but only if the U. S. Department of Justice is party to the agreement and Mayor Rahm Emanuel remains committed to the five- year process, a policing expert said Tuesday.

“If you get a department that’s resistant, doesn’t think anything’s wrong, they’re fighting it, then you’ve got to go to court. But that’s not the case here. That’s why I think something like this can work,” said former Philadelph­ia and Washington, D. C., police chief Charles Ramsey, a former Chicago deputy police superinten­dent.

“I don’t think consent decrees are always needed. I really like collaborat­ive reform. . . . You can make the kinds of changes you need. It can be as transparen­t as you want it to be. And you can get the same result. . . . Everything is there with the exception of reporting directly to a federal judge.”

Ramsey is in a unique position to pass judgment on Emanuel’s plan.

Not only was he paid $ 350 an hour and $ 36,490 over four months to help guide the Chicago Police Department through the federal civil rights investigat­ion triggered by the police shooting of Laquan McDonald, but he also ran the Washington and Philadelph­ia police forces during DOJ investigat­ions of those agencies.

In Washington, that culminated in a seven- year memorandum of agreement and the hiring of an independen­t monitor similar to the one that Emanuel has proposed in Chicago.

Police reform in Philadelph­ia is “95 percent complete” after a process Ramsey described as “collaborat­ive reform with no independen­t monitor. . . . Justus and the DOJ.”

All of that experience leads Ramsey to believe that Emanuel’s model can work every bit as well as court oversight.

“I’m deputy monitor now in Cleveland, which is operating under a consent decree. And most of the interactio­n we have is between the monitor and the Department of Justice,” he said.

“We keep the judge apprised. But so far, the judge has not had to intervene in anything because the department, and Justice and the monitor— we get on the same page . . . without the court actually having to weigh in. They’re always there in the event there’s a problem that can’t be resolved. But my experience has been that a good monitor can resolve most things.”

Earlier this week, Emanuel argued that he’s not backing away from his January commitment to negotiate a court- enforced consent decree with

“I DON’T THINK CONSENT DECREES ARE ALWAYS NEEDED. I REALLY LIKE COLLABORAT­IVE REFORM. … EVERYTHING IS THERE WITH THE EXCEPTION OF REPORTING DIRECTLY TO A FEDERAL JUDGE.” CHARLES RAMSEY, former Chicago deputy police superinten­dent

the Justice Department.

He’s simply recognizin­g political reality; when U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions decided to retreat from police reform agreements nationwide, it left the Chicago Police Department on the dance floor without a partner.

“The model that we’re looking at — a memo of agreement — is just exactly what Chuck Ramsey did with Washington, D. C. You have an outside monitor, an independen­t set of eyes, that will help us implement the very principles that we negotiated with the Obama Justice Department,” the mayor said.

On Tuesday, Ramsey said he remains “concerned” about whether a Sessions- led Justice Department will even be a party to Emanuel’s proposed memorandum of agreement.

“You’ve got to have a third- party. . . . It can’t be the monitor and the city because the monitor would be working for the city. And that doesn’t make sense. DOJ has to be involved. Justice can’t just hold up their hands and say they’re gonna do nothing,” he said.

Police Board President Lori Lightfoot has warned that the memorandum of agreement cannot be “unilateral­ly negotiated by the mayor himself.”

She has argued that the agreement would have “zero legitimacy” without input from the same police reform “stakeholde­rs” with whom the city negotiated before abolishing the Independen­t Police Review Authority and replacing it with a Civilian Office of Police Accountabi­lity.

Ramsey agreed. He advised Emanuel to “keep it transparen­t” by releasing the memorandum of agreement and by following Philadelph­ia’s lead by appointing an oversight group comprised of academics, community and business leaders.

“Part of what will make it legitimate in the eyes of the public is to have a group of individual­s who don’t have an agenda other than wanting to see a better police department and a better city. Not people who have a beef or a gripe and all that kind of stuff because that just gets in theway,” Ramsey said.

“Having that group there that the monitor would also keep abreast of everything that’s going on— it keeps the whole process as transparen­t as it can be. And it holds people accountabl­e.”

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AP FILES Charles Ramsey
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Jeff Sessions
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Rahm Emanuel
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