Chicago Sun-Times

ROAD TO POLICE REFORM BEGINS AND ENDS WITH TRUST

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‘ Reform won’t work if the public doesn’t buy into it.”

Of all the arguments Attorney General Lisa Madigan made last week to urge City Hall to accept federal court oversight over the Chicago Police Department, this is the one we predict will carry the day.

We understand why Mayor Rahm Emanuel is resisting federal oversight — the unpredicta­ble costs, the loss of control, the open- ended commitment. It’s not as if Chicago doesn’t have financial headaches enough without having to spend millions of dollars more on reforms dictated by a federal judge, not decided on by the mayor, the City Council or the taxpayers of Chicago.

But with respect to the police, Chicago remains a city in crisis. Trust and confidence in the police department are dangerousl­y low, especially in predominan­tly African- American neighborho­ods. The Laquan McDonald shooting of Oct. 20, 2014 — 16 bullets from one police gun — haunts our city, and rightly so. Without that trust and confidence, the police cannot do their best work and may be reluctant to try. Chicago’s murder tally tells the story.

It is essential that every Chicagoan “buy into” the coming reforms of the department, as Madigan says. But the mayor should be able to see by now that there’s a real danger this will not happen — too few Chicagoans will buy in — if he insists on keeping the process in- house, without a judge riding herd from the start.

We are not questionin­g the mayor’s commitment to reform. He inherited a dysfunctio­nal police department; he did not create it. But when the chips are down — when it comes time to make the toughest necessary reforms — a judge would be far less conflicted about making the call. Mayors have to worry about political blowback and competing priorities. Federal judges don’t.

We urge the mayor to join with Madigan and others in negotiatin­g a practical and rigorously scheduled federal consent decree, which would mean court oversight. It can be done without the cooperatio­n of the Department of Justice, which under Attorney General Jeff Sessions has made its disdain for such arrangemen­ts clear.

When Madigan’s office, civil liberties groups, influentia­l community organizati­ons and editorial boards line up to warn that anything short of a formal consent decree might not earn the public’s trust, it’s good to listen.

The cornerston­e of police reform is the public’s confidence that the reform is real.

 ??  ?? Attorney General Lisa Madigan | ASHLEE REZIN SUN- TIMES
Attorney General Lisa Madigan | ASHLEE REZIN SUN- TIMES

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