Chicago Sun-Times

TAB FOR JUSTICE DEPT. PROBE OF CPD AT $ 7.4M AND COUNTING

Cost sure to rise as Emanuel negotiates with Lisa Madigan

- BY FRANS PIELMAN Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

The running tab for legal and consulting fees tied to the U. S. Justice Department’s investigat­ion of the Chicago Police Department has now reached $ 7.4 million — and Mayor Rahm Emanuel is still negotiatin­g a consent decree with retiring Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.

The cost, up from $ 5.7 million in August, is certain to rise even higher as invoices and expenses get submitted, negotiatio­ns with Madigan drag on, and the city defends itself against a class- action lawsuit filed by lawyers for Black Lives Matter Chicago and other community groups seeking federal oversight over the CPD.

The lawsuit accused Mayor Rahm Emanuel of reneging on his January 2017 commitment to negotiate a consent decree and instead attempting to cut a “backroom deal” with Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who opposes court oversight over local police department­s.

The new totals were released by the city in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n request. They include $ 3.3 million to Taft Stettinius & Hollister through January; nearly $ 2.1 million through December to the Washington, D. C., law firm of Wilmer Hale, which once counted Corporatio­n Counsel Edward Siskel as a partner; $ 1.7million to The Bromwich Group through January; and $ 230,372 to Polis Solutions Inc. through August.

Siskel did not participat­e in the DOJ probe. Wilmer Hale continued its work for the city even after Siskel replaced Steve Patton as corporatio­n counsel.

The consulting fees include a previously disclosed $ 4,000 paid last summer to former Washington, D. C., police chief Cathy Lanier. One month later, Lanier retired to become senior vice president of security for the National Football League.

Other consulting fees were paid to Charles Ramsey ($ 37,490); Bobcat Training & Consulting ($ 31,376); LaFox Endeavor ($ 47,840); 4Discovery ($ 7,933); Peter Newsham ($ 5,637); Charles A. Gruber Consulting ($ 4,553); former Illinois State Police Director Terrance W. Gainer ($ 4,250); and Paul F. Evans Jr. ($ 3,354).

The Justice Department’s scathing indictment of the city’s police force, triggered by the shooting of 17- yearold Laquan McDonald by a Chicago Police officer, was delivered on Friday the 13th of January 2017.

It created a political nightmare that continues to haunt Emanuel.

The DOJ portrayed Chicago Police officers as poorly trained and equipped, inadequate­ly supervised and seldom discipline­d, despite a pattern of excessive force and civil rights abuses against minorities.

On the day the findings were announced, Emanuel signed an “agreement in principle” to negotiate a consent decree — culminatin­g in the appointmen­t of a federal monitor— to implement the sweeping police reforms the DOJ recommende­d.

But when U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions signaled his disdain for court mandates that tie the hands of local police department­s and ordered a nationwide review of those consent decrees, Emanuel worked in secret with the DOJ to draft a “memorandum of agreement” tailor- made to avoid federal court oversight.

Police reform advocates were united in their outrage, but the mayor stood his ground for months.

It was only after Madigan filed a lawsuit against the city last August that Emanuel finally agreed to negotiate with Madigan to finalize a consent decree— a decree thatwould have rigid timetables and financial commitment­s.

Madigan’s office has been tight- lipped about the status of its negotiatio­ns with the mayor’s office.

Sources said an early draft of portions of a consent decree have been circulatin­g in police reform circles. But it’s likely to take until sometime this summer before a final agreement is reached.

During a luncheon address to the City Club of Chicago lastweek, Police Board President Lori Lightfoot argued that the march toward police reform — culminatin­g in a consent decree mandating federal court oversight— was “taking too long” and that the “shockingly large and unacceptab­le” parade of multimilli­on dollar settlement­s stemming fromallege­d police abuse “delegitimi­zed” the Police Department.

“I have a great deal of respect for our current state attorney general,” Lightfoot said lastweek. “I think it took great courage to wade into these waters. But time is wasting. There are two comprehens­ive reports which identified the challenges in bold relief and offered extensive prescripti­ons for change. Time to get it done. Give the superinten­dent the tools he needs to really drive comprehens­ive change without further delay.”

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 ?? | ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Then- U. S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch in January 2017 discusses the Justice Department investigat­ion of the Chicago Police Department.
| ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES Then- U. S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch in January 2017 discusses the Justice Department investigat­ion of the Chicago Police Department.
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