Chicago Sun-Times

OFFICERS FACE REPRIMAND FOR INSTAGRAM PHOTO

- BYANDYGRIM­M Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ agrimm34

After a weekend of sideline demonstrat­ions that roiled football fans and a divided nation, the Chicago Police Department is investigat­ing a photo of what appears to be two uniformed officers who were photograph­ed “taking a knee” in the lobby of a South Side precinct.

The two African- American officers are seen kneeling beside a woman whose head is bowed. While the woman’s face is not clearly visible, the photo was posted Sunday on the Instagram account of Englewood community activist Aleta Clark, who is best known for selling T- shirts with the slogan “Hugs No Slugs.” Clark, who posted several photos of herself striking a kneeling pose at several locations with children and neighborho­od residents, did not immediatel­y returnmess­ages for commentMon­day.

The pose became controvers­ial last fall, when NFL quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick chose last season to kneel during the national anthem before games to protest police brutality. Several other players have chosen to make similar, silent protests during the anthem this year, prompting an outraged series of tweets from President Donald Trump over the weekend that seemed to galvanize players.

The photo shows the woman kneeling between the two officers, all three with their fists raised, beside the caption: “That Moment when you walk into the police station and ask the Men of Color are they Against Police Brutality and Racism & they say Yes… then you ask them if they support Colin Kapernick [ sic] … and they also say yes… then you ask them to Kneel!”

The photo, which had more than 1,700 likes byMonday afternoon, was one of a series of photos posted on the account showing Chicago residents taking a knee in support of Kaepernick and his protest.

CPD spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Monday the department was aware of the photo.

“We are aware of the photo, and we will address it in the same way we have handled previous incidents in which officers have made political statements while in uniform, with a reprimand and a reminder of department policies,” Guglielmi said in a statement to the Chicago Sun- Times.

Kaepernick went unsigned by any NFL team this offseason, but his protest has only become more polarizing, as other players have chosen to strike the pose or have opted to remain on the bench during the anthem.

Chicago Bears players locked arms in a show of team solidarity for the anthem Sunday at Soldier Field, while the visiting Pittsburgh Steelers players opted to remain in the locker room until kickoff.

In a video posted to her Instagram account, Clark indicates she asked officers to join her in kneeling to show support for Kaepernick and opposition to police brutality. Clark complains that “European” officers refused to join her in kneeling.

The department’s code of conduct bars uniformed officers from participat­ing in any “partisan political campaign,” a rule that supervisor­s reminded all rank- and- file officers about following a January incident in which a Twitter user posted a picture of a CPD vehicle parked near an Inaugurati­on Day protest with a red “Make America Great Again” hat on the dashboard.

Guglielmi said officers involved in both the hat incident and the Sunday photo received reprimands and were counseled on department policy. On Monday afternoon, one of the officers who was pictured was on duty at the 6th District desk, though he declined to comment and referred a reporter to police News Affairs.

Commenters on the “Second City Cop” blog were almost uniformly appalled by the photo. One commenter said CPD should “Fire the Sons of Bitches,” possibly a paraphrase of a recent Trump speech in which the president suggested NFL owners should fire any player who participat­es in an anthem protest and “get that son of a bitch off the field.”

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