Chicago Sun-Times

HIGH- RANKING COPS ACCUSED OF PROVIDING PREFERENTI­AL PARKING AT UNITED CENTER

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@ suntimes. com | @ fspielman

A high- ranking Chicago Police officer and a lieutenant working under that deputy chief were accused Monday of providing a “preferenti­al treatment scheme to reserve and provide free parking at the United Center” for off- duty cops, their family and friends.

Last year, Inspector General Joe Ferguson unmasked a similar preferenti­al parking scheme at Bulls and Blackhawks games executed by eight supervisor­s and traffic control aides working at the city’s 911 emergency center.

The new scheme accuses a deputy chief and a lieutenant, neither of whom were identified by name, of engaging in and supervisin­g a similar system of playing parking favorites.

“On numerous occasions, most notably during the Blackhawks’ 2016 Stanley Cup playoffs, the OIG observed uniformed CPD officers allow off- duty law enforcemen­t officers and their friends and family to park on the north and south sides of Monroe Street between Wood Street and Paulina Street,” Ferguson wrote in his latest quarterly report, released Monday.

The inspector general said signs on both sides of the street made clear there was “no parking allowed.” Email reviews and interviews “confirmed” the allegation­s of favoritism, Ferguson wrote.

“In their interview, both CPD employees offered several meritless defenses as to why the parking scheme existed,” his report says.

“The investigat­ion also establishe­d that preferenti­al parking was happening at other event venues throughout the city and that other city department­s engaged in preferenti­al parking schemes.”

Ferguson recommende­d that the Chicago Police Department make it clear to officers that “courtesy parking at events in any city location — whether for themselves, fellow city employees, family and/ or friends” was expressly forbidden and would result in disciplina­ry action.

If there is an “operationa­l need” for off- duty cops and other highrankin­g officials to park on streets surroundin­g major event venues, special orders and criteria should be drafted to justify the perk and prior approvals should be required, the inspector general said.

C PD responded to Ferguson’ s disclosure by reprimandi­ng the chief. The department declined to discipline the lieutenant on grounds that he or she “followed the directions of the deputy chief in good faith.”

The Bureau of Internal Affairs also conducted a review of the officers who benefited from the preferenti­al parking scheme but decided not to discipline them, Ferguson wrote.

A Feb. 7 administra­tive message to the police states: “Members are reminded that arranging, providing, or utilizing ‘ courtesy’ parking on the public way — whether for themselves or others ( such as city employees, family members or friends) is prohibited in the absence of exigent circumstan­ces. Moreover, the use of official authority or resources to extend such ‘ courtesies’ my result in disciplina­ry action.”

In the preferenti­al parking scheme at the 911 center, parking requests from friends and relatives of management­level emergency management employees were sent to city email addresses.

OEMC managers would notify supervisor­s working outside the United Center of the names and vehicle descriptio­ns of the VIP parkers who should be allowed on Wood. Traffic control aides posted on Warren and Wood and Madison and Wood received similar informatio­n.

To prevent a repeat of the scheme, the department said it planned to provide ethics training for Traffic Management Authority employees with help from the Board of Ethics.

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SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
 ??  ?? Joe Ferguson
Joe Ferguson

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