Chicago Sun-Times

FOP TRIES AGAIN TO SLOW NEGOTIATIO­NS ON CONSENT DECREE

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

The Fraternal Order of Police is trying yet again to slow down negotiatio­ns aimed at forcing federal court oversight over the Chicago Police Department just as an attorney representi­ng Black Lives Matter and other groups is saying the “clock is ticking” on a consent decree.

University of Chicago law professor Craig Futterman, lead counsel for those groups, said the city and Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, who is not running for re-election, need to wrap up negotiatio­ns within days to guarantee two to four weeks of public input on the consent decree before a Sept. 1 court deadline.

“If you’re building in something like two to four weeks for public comment and further negotiatio­ns by the city and state that could take up to another four weeks, you’re now in September,” Futterman said Friday.

“If you don’t do that now or soon, you’re risking not having either an opportunit­y for public feedback, which would be devastatin­g to all the parties. Or not having sufficient time just to review because there’s a new attorney general who could have a completely different mission and a new mayor, for that matter.”

The FOP is doing its best to grind the process to a halt.

On Thursday, the union filed a “motion to hold the proceeding­s in abeyance” pending a ruling on the motion to intervene that the union filed last month.

“Representa­tives of the lodge have not been allowed to discuss with the parties in particular the several drafts of a consent decree that have been exchanged between the parties and the substantiv­e provisions of the consent decree that would impact the wages, hours and working conditions contained in the current collective bargaining agreement,” the new motion states.

A letter to Assistant Chief Deputy Attorney General Gary S. Caplan attached to the FOP filing urges the city and state not to “present to the court a completed and agreed upon consent decree” until the union, which has so far been “shut out,” is allowed to participat­e in those discussion­s.

“Disposing of this action without the lodge’s participat­ion may impair or impede the ability of the lodge to protect its collective bargaining interests,” the letter, signed by FOP attorney Joel A. D’Alba, says.

City Hall sources said negotiatio­ns with Madigan’s office are “proceeding in good faith” and “getting closer” to a consent decree.

But release of a draft agreement is still “a few weeks away,” the sources said.

Futterman branded the FOP’s latest motion par for the course.

“Along with their motion to intervene, they filed a motion to dismiss the case. They don’t want a consent decree. They don’t want federal oversight. It’s not about a seat at the table or a greater police officer voice in this process. It’s about they don’t want oversight at all,” Futterman said.

“They say, ‘There’s no code of silence. There never was any police torture, even back in the Burge era.’ That’s what the current administra­tion of the FOP has said: That the [Justice Department] investigat­ion was a fraud.”

The City Council’s Black Caucus is threatenin­g to hold up ratificati­on of any police contract that continues to make it “easy for officers to lie” by giving them 24 hours before providing a statement after a shooting and includes “impediment­s to accountabi­lity” that prohibit anonymous complaints, allow officers to change statements after reviewing video and requires sworn affidavits.

Futterman said he does not expect the consent decree to tie the city’s hands in police contract talks that have not yet begun in earnest, even though the contract expired a year ago.

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